precipitate, a concentrate of fine particles, is usually visible (macroscopically or microscopically) because the precipitated product is forced to remain suspended
Examples
VDRL slide flocculation test
RPR card test
Kahn’s test for syphilis
Flocculation test (A precipitation reaction)
Precipitation: Performance, applications
Advantages
sensitive for antigen detection
Limited applications
Time taken - 10 minutes
Direct agglutination
Principle
combination of an insoluble particulate antigen with its soluble antibody
forms antigen-antibody complex
particles clump/agglutinate
used for antigen detection
Examples
bacterial agglutination tests for sero-typing and sero-grouping e.g., Vibrio cholerae, Salmonella spp
Passive (indirect) agglutination
Principle
precipitation reaction converted into agglutination - coating antigen onto the surface of carrier particles like red blood cells, latex, gelatin, bentonite
background clears
Examples of types
latex agglutination
co-agglutination
passive hemagglutination (treated red blood cells made resistant)
Examples of tests - agglutination for leptospirosis Widal test (typhoid fever)
Reverse passive agglutination
Principle
antigen binds to soluble antibody coated on carrier particles and results in agglutination
detects antigens
Example
detecting cholera toxin
Reverse passive agglutination
Agglutination: Performance, applications
Advantages
sensitive for antibody detection
Limitations
Prozone phenomenon:
requires the right combination of quantities of antigen and antibody
handled through dilution to improve the match
Time taken
10-30 minutes
Hemagglutination
Principle
many human viruses have the ability to bind to the surface structures on red blood cells from different species thereby causing agglutination
Example
influenza virus binds to fowl’s red blood cells
Hemagglutination inhibition
Principle
Antibodies to the virus in the patient serum bind to the virus; blocks binding sites on the viral surfaces
prevents the virus from agglutinating the red cells
Example
detecting antibodies to influenza and dengue viruses
antibodies in serum neutralize antigens on the surface of viruses (neutralizing antibodies)
inhibited viruses cannot infect cell lines
Example
plaque neutralization assay for dengue virus, Japanese encephalitis virus
antibodies to bacterial toxins and other extra-cellular products that display measurable activities (e.g., ASLO, diphtheria toxin, clostridium toxin)
Neutralization: Performance, applications
Advantages
Highly specific
Often used as gold standard
Limitations
Technically demanding
Time consuming
Can only be used for viruses that can be grown
Complexity limits the use beyond gold standard
Time taken
1 week
Radio-immunoassays
Principle
Radioactively labelled-antibody (or antigen) competes with the patient’s unlabelled antibody (or antigen) for binding sites on a known amount of antigen (or antibody)
Reduction in radioactivity of the antigen-patient antibody complex compared with control test is used to quantify the amount of patient antibody / antibody bound
Limited use due to the problems with handling radioisotope
Example
HBsAg
Thyroid function test
Radio-immunoassays: Performance, applications
Adantages
highly sensitive
can be used for detection of small quantities
quantification possible
Limitations
expensive
requires isotopes
Time taken
1 day
Enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA)
Principle
use of enzyme-labelled immunoglobulin to detect antigens or antibodies
signals are developed by the action of hydrolyzing enzyme on chromogenic substrate