The CRP test measures levels of C-reactive protein in the blood. CRP is a protein produced by the liver during inflammation. A CRP test can indicate the presence of inflammation and is used to help diagnose and monitor conditions involving infection, injury, or inflammation like heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. The test works by detecting if CRP in a blood sample causes latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies to agglutinate. Elevated CRP levels suggest active inflammation from a condition requiring further evaluation or treatment monitoring.
The CRP test measures levels of C-reactive protein in the blood. CRP is a protein produced by the liver during inflammation. A CRP test can indicate the presence of inflammation and is used to help diagnose and monitor conditions involving infection, injury, or inflammation like heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. The test works by detecting if CRP in a blood sample causes latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies to agglutinate. Elevated CRP levels suggest active inflammation from a condition requiring further evaluation or treatment monitoring.
The CRP test measures levels of C-reactive protein in the blood. CRP is a protein produced by the liver during inflammation. A CRP test can indicate the presence of inflammation and is used to help diagnose and monitor conditions involving infection, injury, or inflammation like heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. The test works by detecting if CRP in a blood sample causes latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies to agglutinate. Elevated CRP levels suggest active inflammation from a condition requiring further evaluation or treatment monitoring.
The CRP test measures levels of C-reactive protein in the blood. CRP is a protein produced by the liver during inflammation. A CRP test can indicate the presence of inflammation and is used to help diagnose and monitor conditions involving infection, injury, or inflammation like heart disease, cancer, and arthritis. The test works by detecting if CRP in a blood sample causes latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies to agglutinate. Elevated CRP levels suggest active inflammation from a condition requiring further evaluation or treatment monitoring.
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What is C-reactive protein (CRP)?
C-reactive protein (CRP) is a special type of protein
produced by the liver in response to inflammatory cytokines such as Interleukin-6 (IL-6). CRP is classified as an acute phase reactant, which means that its levels will rise within a few hours after tissue injury, the start of an infection, or other cause of inflammation. The most important role of CRP is its interaction with the complement system, which is one of the body’s immunologic defense mechanisms. Why CRP test is done? • C-reactive protein (CRP) test is performed to determine if a person has a problem linked to acute infection or inflammation. • The CRP test is not diagnostic of any condition, but it can be used together with signs and symptoms and other tests to evaluate an individual for an acute or chronic inflammatory condition. These include: • To determine if there is infection after surgery: CRP levels normally increase within two to six hours following surgery but then return to normal by the third day; if CRP levels are elevated three days after surgery it means there is an infection. • To keep track of an infection or disease that can cause inflammation: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), lymphoma (cancer of the lymph nodes), immune system diseases such as lupus (SLE), rheumatoid arthritis ( swelling of the tissues that line the joints) and osteomyelitis (infection of the bone) are some conditions in which inflammation can be monitored with a CRP test. • To monitor treatment of a disease such as cancer or infection: Not only do CRP levels go up quickly if you have an infection but they also return to normal quickly if you are responding to the treatment. • In general, the main causes of increased CRP and other markers of inflammation are a variety of conditions, including • burns, • trauma, • infections, such as pneumonia or tuberculosis, • heart attack, • chronic inflammatory diseases such as lupus, vasculitis, or rheumatoid arthritis, • inflammatory bowel disease, and • certain cancers. • CRP tests for heart disease • It's thought that a high level of hs-CRP in your blood is associated with an increased risk of heart attacks. A CRP test doesn't indicate the cause of inflammation, though, so it's possible that a high hs-CRP level could mean there's inflammation caused by something besides your heart. • The American Heart Association doesn't recommend an hs-CRP test for everyone. Rather, the test is most useful for people who have a 5 to 10 percent chance of having a heart attack within the next 10 years. This intermediate risk level is determined by the global risk assessment, which is based on lifestyle choices, family history and current health status. • The test also helps determine the risk of a second heart attack, as people with a high level of hs-CRP who had a heart attack are more likely to have another event than those with a normal level. • People who have a low risk of having a heart attack are less likely to benefit from having an hs-CRP test. People who have a known high risk of having a heart attack should seek treatment and preventive measures regardless of how high their hs-CRP level is. CRP Test Principle • CRP Test is based on the latex agglutination method introduced by Singer, et. al., in 1957. • This is a slide agglutination test for the qualitative and semiquantitative detection of C-Reactive Protein (CRP) in human serum. • Latex particles coated with goat IgG anti-human CRP are agglutinated when mixed with samples containing CRP. • When latex particles coated with human anti-CRP are mixed with a patient’s serum containing C – reactive proteins, this results in visible agglutination wihtin 2 minutes. • For a standard CRP test, a normal reading is less than 10 milligram per liter (mg/L). A test result showing a CRP level greater than 10 mg/L is a sign of serious infection, trauma or chronic disease, which likely will require further testing to determine the cause CRP Test Procedure (Qualitative) • Bring all reagents and serum sample to Room Temperature and mix latex reagent gently prior to use. Do not dilute the controls and serum. • Place 1 drop each of serum, positive control and negative control on separate reaction circles. • Then add CRP latex reagent 1 drop to each of the circles. • Mix with separate mixing sticks and spread the fluid over the entire area of the cell. • Tilt the slide back and forth slowly for 2 minutes observing preferably under artificial light. Interpretation
Agglutination of latex particles is considered a positive reaction,
indicating the presence of C-reactive protein at a significant and detectable level. Specimens which do not contain human CRP will not cause agglutination. If controls do not give expected reactions the test is invalid and must be repeated.
جدێڵۆن-یۆكناز Knowledge-university Title: Blood Parameteres And Rheumatiod Diseases This report submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for Human Genetic Module in Knowledge University