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Rubella,
most commonly known as German or 3-day measles, is caused by an RNA virus
that belongs to the family Togaviridae. The infection is highly contagious
and is spread through direct or droplet contact from nasopharyngeal secretions.
The infection commonly affects children aged between 5-14 years as well
as young adults. Rubella infection is largely benign with symptoms ranging
from subclinical to a disease characterized by an erythematous rash, low-grade
fever, headache, lymphadenopathy, arthralgia, and conjunctivitis.
Immunizations and natural infection both confer lifelong immunity and
reinfection is extremely rare. Congenital Rubella infection, unlike acquired
infection, may cause disastrous clinical effects to the unborn child.
A fetus may be stillborn or have such abnormalities as bone and cardiovascular
defects, mental retardation, encephalitis, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly,
thrombocytopenic purpura, cataracts and microcephaly. Because of severity
of the complication from infection, detection of active infection in pregnant
women is paramount. Therefore, it is important that the level of immunity
be determined in women of reproductive age, pregnant women, neonates who
were exposed in utero, and others who may have been in close contact.
As clinical recognition of Rubella infection upon physical examination
is highly unreliable and subclinical cases are frequent, serological testing
is vital to determine immune status and detect infection.
| Product |
Cat
# |
Description |
Specimen
material |
Method |
Size |
| Rubella
IgG |
E-RVG-K14 |
Quantitative
detection of Anti- Rubella
virus IgG antibodies |
Serum
and Plasma |
ELISA |
96
tests |
| Rubella
IgM |
E-RVM-K15 |
Qualitative
detection of Anti-Rubella
virus IgM antibodies |
Serum
and Plasma |
ELISA |
96
tests |
Sample
Volume : 10 µl
Controls/ Calibrators : 5 Calibrators ( IgG ) 3 controls ( IgM )
Incubation : 45+ 45+15 min
Substrate : TMB
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