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Use of Trypsin-Modified Human Erythrocytes in Rubella Hemagglutination-Inhibition Testing
- Publication Year :
- 1972
-
Abstract
- A method of treating human erythrocytes with trypsin has been modified and found to be an efficient and practical indicator system for the rubella hemagglutination-inhibition test. Both the trypsin-treated human cells and the widely used, newborn chicken erythrocytes were used in comparative testing of 464 selected diagnostic rubella serums. Results with each cell system were essentially the same. The trypsin treatment procedure has been found to be relatively simple, and with our limited testing has not presented any problems with reproducibility. Other advantages include the ready availability of human cells, greater intralaboratory standardization of the test by using the same donors over a long period of time, and elimination of adsorption of test sera with red blood cells.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Erythrocytes
Biology
Rubella
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
ABO Blood-Group System
Diagnosis, Differential
Pregnancy
Long period
medicine
Methods
Animals
Humans
Serologic Tests
Trypsin
General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics
Antigens, Viral
Clinical Microbiology and Immunology
Hemagglutination assay
Rh-Hr Blood-Group System
General Immunology and Microbiology
Intralaboratory
Immune Sera
General Medicine
Hemagglutination Inhibition Tests
medicine.disease
Virology
Cell system
Coombs Test
Animals, Newborn
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Human erythrocytes
Female
Treatment procedure
Chickens
Rubella virus
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2c6ea52abdcea0893016f3a37e4a2038