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CHLAMYDIAL SERUM IgG ANTIBODIES IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE SALPINGITIS MEASURED BY AN ENZYME‐LINKED IMMUNOSORBENT ASSAY
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Citations
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References
1982
Year
Autoimmune DiseaseClinical Infectious DiseaseChlamydia TrachomatisPathogenesisImmunologySerologic TestingVirologyAntibody ScreeningInfection ControlEnzyme-linked Immunosorbent AssayC. TrachomatisMedicineClinical Microbiology
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of serum IgG antibodies to Chlamydia trachomatis has been developed. The C. trachomatis subtype LGV-2 was used as antigen. The ELISA was reproducible and its sensitivity and specificity compared well with that of the single-antigen immunofluorescence test (r = 0.83). 29 (85%) of the 34 patients with acute salpingitis had chlamydial serum IgG antibodies measured by the ELISA technique. The detection level in single blood donor specimens was 30%. Among the 34 patients with acute salpingitis, 16 paired serum specimens showed a fourfold or greater rise/fall in antibody titres, and 12 of these belonged to the 19 who harboured C. trachomatis in the lower genital tract.
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