In transplantation, anti-HLA Abs, especially targeting the DQ locus, are well-known to lead to rejection. These Abs identified by Luminex single Ag assays recognize polymorphic amino acids on HLA, named eplets. The HLA Eplet Registry included 83 DQ eplets, mainly deduced from amino acid sequence alignments, among which 66 have not been experimentally verified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral technical limitations of Luminex single antigen (LSA) assays have been described so far. This study focused on a reactivity pattern observed in many sera that cannot be explained by eplets described in the Epitope Registry database and sometimes appearing against a self-HLA allele or antigen. In most cases, this pattern is revealed by a discrepant result when compared with other assays (Luminex PRA, cell-binding assays such as flow cytometry cross match, LSA from another manufacturer…).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLooking at the urine for diagnostic purposes, once performed by ancient Egyptians, can still provide some valuable clues in modern medicine. Several diseases have been named after their associated urine color and this underlines the clinical value of visual urine inspection: blue diaper disease, purple urine bag syndrome, black urine disease or porphyria. Abnormal urine color could be challenging for the clinician: it may reveal neoplastic disease (urologic cancer; melanoma), cell lysis (rhabdomyolysis; hemolysis), infection (lymphatic filariasis; malaria), enzyme deficiency (porphyria; alkaptonuria), medication or food intake.
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