Gravindex
Purposepregnancy test

Gravindex is an agglutination inhibition test performed on a urine sample to detect pregnancy.[1] It is based on double antigen antibody reaction. The test detects the prevention of agglutination of HCG-coated latex particles by HCG present in the urine of pregnant women.[2]

Procedure and results

Kits commercially available contain two reagents; one is a suspension of HCG-coated latex particles, and the other is a solution of HCG antibodies. One drop of the urine is mixed with one drop of antibody solution for one minute on a black glass slide. One drop of the HCG-coated latex particles are added to the slide and left for one minute.

  • If the level of HCG is too low, the antibodies will remain to agglutinate the HCG-coated latex particles. If agglutination occurs, the subject is not pregnant.
  • If the level of HCG is high, the HCG will bind to the antibodies, and thus no agglutination with the HCG-coated latex particles occurs. If no agglutination occurs, the subject is pregnant.

References

  1. MCH Research Series. Health Services Administration, Bureau of Community Health Services. 1974. pp. 8–9.
  2. Khurana, Indu; Khurana, Ayushi (2022-07-06). Concise Textbook of Human Physiology - E-Book. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 422. ISBN 978-81-312-6474-4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.