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  2. Anti-streptolysin O - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-streptolysin_O

    Anti-streptolysin O (ASO or ASLO) is the antibody made against streptolysin O, an immunogenic, oxygen-labile streptococcal hemolytic exotoxin produced by most strains of group A and many strains of groups C and G Streptococcus bacteria. The "O" in the name stands for oxygen-labile; the other related toxin being oxygen-stable streptolysin-S.

  3. Anti-DNase B - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-DNase_B

    Post-streptococcus glomerulonephritis is more often associated with group A strep skin infection than it is with strep pharyngitis, so in a patient with suspected post-strep glomerulonephritis with a negative ASO titer, one can then obtain anti-DNase-B titers which are more sensitive for group A strep and for its various strains.

  4. Erythema nodosum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erythema_nodosum

    The ESR is typically high, the C-reactive protein elevated, and the blood showing an increase in white blood cells. [4] The ESR is initially very high and falls as the nodules of erythema nodosum. The ASO titer is high in cases associated with a streptococcal throat infection.

  5. Hemolytic disease of the newborn (anti-Rhc) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemolytic_disease_of_the...

    Thus, if the initial titer is 1:4 and stable but increases at 26 weeks' gestation to 1:8, assessment with MCA Doppler velocity at that point is reasonable. However, if the patient presents in the first trimester with a 1:8 titer that remains stable at 1:8 throughout the second trimester, continued serial antibody titers are appropriate.

  6. Antisense therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisense_therapy

    Antisense therapy is a form of treatment that uses antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) to target messenger RNA (mRNA). ASOs are capable of altering mRNA expression through a variety of mechanisms, including ribonuclease H mediated decay of the pre-mRNA, direct steric blockage, and exon content modulation through splicing site binding on pre-mRNA. [1]

  7. Seroconversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seroconversion

    Seroconversion plays a major role in the diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis B infections. [60] As in other viral infections, seropositivity indicates that an individual has a sufficiently high concentration of antibody or antigen in the blood to be detectable by standard techniques.

  8. Anti-SSA/Ro autoantibodies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-SSA/Ro_autoantibodies

    Immunofluorescence pattern of SS-A and SS-B antibodies. Produced using serum from a patient on HEp-20-10 cells with a FITC conjugate. Anti-SSA autoantibodies (anti–Sjögren's-syndrome-related antigen A autoantibodies, also called anti-Ro, or similar names including anti-SSA/Ro, anti-Ro/SSA, anti–SS-A/Ro, and anti-Ro/SS-A) are a type of anti-nuclear autoantibodies that are associated with ...

  9. EC50 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EC50

    E increases with [A] until at sufficiently high [A], when E plateaus towards an asymptotic maximum attainable response, E max. The [A] at which E is 50% of E max is termed the half maximal effective concentration and is abbreviated EC 50 , or rarely [A] 50 .