Hey, the video was helpful, I have a question .. Are these immune complexes going to be eliminated ? more specifically, are RBC's Ag-Ab going to be eliminated by phagocyte ?
Thank you for your feedback. Yes, the immune complexes formed inside the body are removed by opsonization and phagocytosis. These reactions are mediated by the complement system.
J'ai fait une prise de sang et le résultat était (titre des IgG Rubeole) (POSITIF 32.977 UI/ml) pouvez-vous m'expliquer ce pourcentage s'il vous plait merci d'avance
It means you’re immune to ruebella. The 32.997 IU/mL came as a result of a titer, which is when we do a series of solutions of the serum and an antigen and dilute it over and over. It varies between tests, but the number signifies how strong of a reaction your antibodies reacted to the antigen. Someone can correct me if I’m wrong.
In this video she has marked only one major difference that is in precipitation reaction soluble antigen is use. Where as in agglutination reaction particulate antigen like whole cell is uses
انقر فوق الزر سيسي (ترجمات) أسفل الفيديو، والآن انقر على زر الإعدادات، حدد خيار الترجمة، ثم حدد الخيار أوتوترانزلات وحدد العربية. من خلال القيام بذلك يمكنك الحصول على الترجمة العربية. شكرا
Explicative, succinct, PERFECT. Thank you for all your good work. Your videos were a life saviour for my Immunology exam.
Thank you for your feedback.
May god bless you
Amazing and crystal clear explanation
Im delighted for making this flawless videos as it makes it easir for the medical students to understand , Thank you s
Tq
My doubts related to this topic are completely cleared.😃 Thank you very much🙏
Thank you for your valuable feedback.
its so easy without a language barrier...
you are brilliant
Thank God RUclips is here
the video help to understand differences between Precipitation and agglutination reactions
Thank you for your feedback.
Great video
Thank you so much, so helpful
Thank you madam😇🙏🏻
It's really helpful for me..thank you mam
Thanks
Very easy to understand
Very helpful, could u make ur videos in frensh?
thank you, clear as glass c:
Thanks
too good...loved it
Thank you madam. Would you kindly explain coagglutination.
Very helpful videos. Thank you so much!
Thanks
Helped 👌
why do we have to do passive agglutination when precipitation reactions will give the result whether ag or ab is present or not
Thank you very much
+Iva Szk you're welcome.
Thank you so much 🥰
thanx a lot that was very helpful
Thank you
Thank you
Thank you so much!
Is reverse passive agglutination better for non agglutinating antibodies? or only coumbs test?
سلام عليكم محتاجه جواب هذا سوال ضروري لماذا تم تقسم أنواع Agglutination. وهم نفس المبدا وماهو الاختلاف بينهم
great explanation! thank you
Thank you for your feedback.
thank u but plz dont use electronic voice
Can you called heptane as paticulate antigen?
superb i need video for complement fixation test...
Thanks. We will soon try to upload video on complement fixation test.
Hey, the video was helpful, I have a question .. Are these immune complexes going to be eliminated ? more specifically, are RBC's Ag-Ab going to be eliminated by phagocyte ?
Thank you for your feedback. Yes, the immune complexes formed inside the body are removed by opsonization and phagocytosis. These reactions are mediated by the complement system.
I am just given a lecture about the same topic
But i was not able to develop concept bout*Febrile agglutinins*
Can u explin it please?
Ag soluble ; why we don't use precipitation tech ? ( soory for my english )
Ppt technique cant be used in determining antibody antigen test as agglutins wont be visible
Thanks alot
+Doc Shaheen you're welcome
Auto voice and I shut it down
If agglutination reaction is for insoluble antigen then why soluble antigens are coated artificially in passive agglutination?
Passive agglutination makes it feasable to detect soluble antigens.
J'ai fait une prise de sang et le résultat était (titre des IgG Rubeole) (POSITIF 32.977 UI/ml) pouvez-vous m'expliquer ce pourcentage s'il vous plait merci d'avance
It means you’re immune to ruebella. The 32.997 IU/mL came as a result of a titer, which is when we do a series of solutions of the serum and an antigen and dilute it over and over. It varies between tests, but the number signifies how strong of a reaction your antibodies reacted to the antigen.
Someone can correct me if I’m wrong.
I can't understand diff bw agglutination and precipitation clearly? plz help
In this video she has marked only one major difference that is in precipitation reaction soluble antigen is use. Where as in agglutination reaction particulate antigen like whole cell is uses
make notes and link them
BHAI... Kuch khud bhi krle. Ab kya spoon feeding chaiye tujhe.
مترجم
انقر فوق الزر سيسي (ترجمات) أسفل الفيديو، والآن انقر على زر الإعدادات، حدد خيار الترجمة، ثم حدد الخيار أوتوترانزلات وحدد العربية. من خلال القيام بذلك يمكنك الحصول على الترجمة العربية. شكرا
Thank you So much