Anti-reticulin antibody

The anti-retinal autoantibody is an IgA antibody, and its role in the pathogenesis of patients with glial intestinal diseases is unclear. In patients with glial intestinal diseases, IgA antibodies to reticular proteins can be found in the blood. The role of such antibodies needs to be continuously developed as technology advances. Basic Information Specialist classification: Digestive examination classification: blood examination Applicable gender: whether men and women apply fasting: fasting Analysis results: Below normal: Normal value: no Above normal: negative: normal. Positive: Anti-retinal autoantibodies are positive in some patients with glioin intestinal disease. Reminder: Each experimental test should establish its own normal control value according to its own and conditions. Normal value still uncertain. Clinical significance Abnormal results: Anti-retinal autoantibodies were positive in some patients with glioin intestinal disease. Need to check the population of patients with glucan enteropathy. Positive result may be disease: precautions for glucan enteropathy Requirements for inspection: Each experimental examination should establish its own normal control value according to its own and conditions. Inspection process Detection method: Indirect immunofluorescence is the main detection method, and ELISA requires the key epitope to retain intact R1-ARA self-antigen. The characteristic of R1-ARA in the tissue reactivity of rat kidney, liver and stomach is similar to the distribution of net hard protein in silver staining. Not suitable for the crowd There are no special taboos. Adverse reactions and risks There are no related complications.

Was this article helpful?

The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.