Diagnositc Immunology Flashcards

1
Q

Serology orders

A

Interactions between antigen and antibodies

Useful for

  • screening a population for the presence of antibodies
  • identification of infectious agents/antigens
  • diagnosis B-cell cancers or autoimmunity/hypersensitivities
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2
Q

Immunodianostic assays

A

Detect presence and amount of an antibody and/or antibody

Titer = relative concentration for he antigen/antibody in contention
- MUST KNOW ONE OF ANTIGEN/ANTIBODY before running a titer (cant diagnose unknown)

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3
Q

Five main types of diagnostic assays

A

Nephelometry: detection of immune complexes in liquid w/out precipitates.

Precipitation reactions: detect insoluble reactions between antigens and antibodies which form precipitates

Agglutination reactions: detect aggregates from the interactions between antibodies and antigens with a specific particle attached to one or the other.

Labeled immunoassay: measures signals from a “label” placed in the solution that is specific for a select antigen/antibody

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4
Q

Agglutination reactions

A

Most common with IgM antibodies due to the pentimer structure
- best structure for agglutination

Generated from cross linking between double antibodies and insoluble antigens they code for

involve a reaction between a soluble antibody and an insoluble antigen

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5
Q

direct Coombs test

A

Blood sample is taken from patient suspected for hemolytic anemia induced by autoimmunity

Coombs reagent is then mixed with washed blood sample without plasma (usually codes for selected antigen/antibody suspected)

If agglutination occurs, suggests presence of the blood type antigen or autoantibodies present

often used for autoimmune reaction diagnosis such as RA and hemolytic diseases

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6
Q

Indirect Coombs test

A

MOST common type
- screens for blood typing and Rh- pregnancy reactions

Patient serum is drawn and donor blood is mixed into a solution

Patient antibodies will bind to donors blood (signals incompatible match)

Coombs reagent is mixed in with the solution and agglutination will occur if the patient antibodies in the serum bound to the donor blood

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7
Q

Immunoassay labeled

A

Labeling antibodies or antigens allows for visualization of an antigen/antibody
- produces a light if the target is present

Types of labels:

  • fluorophores
  • Enzymes/substrates
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8
Q

Flow cytometry

A

Cells are bound with fluorescent-labeled antibodies
- antibodies are specific for cell-specific surface markers (CD 3/4/8/20)

often used in HIV diagnosis

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9
Q

Slide agglutination and agglutination inhibition

A

Cheap and quick way to determine blood type, previous bacterial infections and latex allergies

Agglutination inhibition =. Mix patients blood in with beads that possess specific antigens

  • no agglutination = positive
  • agglutination = negative
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10
Q

Hemagglutination

A

Routinely preformed on RBC typing and Rh factor

Done in wells

  • positive sign = watery and widespread
  • negative sign = solid and clumped in the middle
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11
Q

Types of labels in immunoassays

A

Fluorophores

  • flow cytometry
  • western blot
  • immunoflurorescence microscopy

Enzymes

  • ELISA
  • western blot
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12
Q

Flow cytometry

A

Cells are stained with fluorescent-labeled antibodies to specific CD markers and bind to their specific cells

Cells can then be introduced to cytokines or not and activity can be noted

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13
Q

Direct vs indirect immunoflurorescence

A

Direct = primary antibody directly binds to cells/tissue detects presence of antigen

Indirect = secondary antibodies bind to primary antibodies detecting specific tissue antigens.

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14
Q

Enzyme-Linked-Immunosorbent Assays (ELISA)

A

Colorless enzyme solutions are mixed with separated antibody/protein samples

Positive sign for the protein that binds to the enzyme = colored via substrates formed (usually blue or red)

Used for HIV testing, drug screening, infections, hormone levels.

3 types of ELISA assays

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15
Q

3 types of ELISA assays

A

Direct assay: antigens and other sample components are placed in the well/ area first and then the primary antibody binds to what it reacts with
- primary antibody possesses the enzyme

Indirect assay: primary antibodies coat the well/area first and then the antigens are placed in the well, followed by a secondary antibody specific for an antigen being looked for
- secondary antibody possesses the enzyme

In both situations, after washing free floating antibodies, the enzyme substrate is then administered

Sandwich assay: similar to an indirect assay except uses specific Biotin molecules on the primary antibody. Then avidin molecules are bound to the enzyme with multiple avidin binding to biotin.
- allows for greater signal amplification and specificity (strongest one)

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16
Q

Indirect vs direct detection in ELISA

A

Indirect detection, multiple secondary antibodies can bind to a primary anti body(only done in indirect or sand which assays)
- amplifies signal and allows for greater sensitivity

17
Q

Radioimmunoassay

A

Radio-labeled secondary antibodies that bind to primary antibodies in the patient serum if present

Used to detect and quantify antibody titers

18
Q

RAST

A

Radio allegosorbent test which tests for specific IgE in patient titer

Used when patient cannot have dermal allergy testing and tests for allergies

Examples = psoriasis/eczema

19
Q

Western blots

A

Identify and determine the real-time quantity of a certain protein/antibody in a patient sample

Used to confirm ELISA assays and for both HIV and Lyme diseases

20
Q

Nephelometry

A

Determines concentration of antibodies in a patient titer sample by measuring the Ag;Ab immune complexes in the liquid phase

Uses light to do this. And is usually used to confirm measurements of IgM, IgG and IgA

21
Q

Precipitation reactions

A

Measures if patient titer has antibodies for a specific antigen

Need to have an optimal concentration of both antigen and antibody (equivalence zone) in order to get appropriate amounts of precipitation
- if patient has the antibody then precipitates will form a precipitin ring around the equivalence zone

22
Q

Radial immunodiffusion

A

Used for haemolytic anemias and complement disorders

Tests for serum haptoglobin levels
- If hemolytic anemia is present, haptoglobin levels will be very lower = small and condensed

23
Q

Double immunodiffusion

A

A branch off of radial immunodiffusion

Detects antigen/antibody presence in patient serum

If present produces a precipitin line from both wells will occur
- used pretty much only for fungal infections, specifically coccidioidomycosis