The ANAPLASMA-ELISA DOG is an indirect enzyme immunoassay for detecting IgG antibodies to Anaplasma phagocytophilum in serum and plasma samples from dogs.
Anaplasma phagocytophilum is the causative agent of anaplasmosis - a common tick-borne disease in dogs. In general antibodies to Anaplasma phagocytophilum are detectable 10 to 14 days post infection (2 to 5 days after the morulae are detectable in dyed blodd smears).
A remarkable rise of antibodies within seven through 21 days is characteristic of an active Anaplasma infection. But a high-level antibody titre persisting for several months does not point out an acute anaplasmosis. If there is suspicion of anaplasmosis then besides the clinical symptoms, the dynamic titre should be monitored.
Features and benefits
- Faster and easier to use compared to Indirect Immunofluorescence Antibody Tests (IFATs) for anaplasmosis
- High sensitivity of 92.5% and high specificity of up to 97%
(validated with n = 154 characterized dog sera)
Improve your workflow efficiency with AFOSA assays
- Ready-to-use reagents (Positive/Negative Controls, Conjugate, Substrate, Stop Solution)
- Color-coded caps
Interchangeable reagents between AFOSA assays - Microplate with 12 individual strips of 8 wells
- All AFOSA ELISA kits use the same short protocol
- Unified pipetting volume of 100 µl
- Suitable for automated ELISA instruments
For
up-to-date licensing information and product-specific disclaimers, see
the respective handbook or user manual. Assays for veterinary use only.
Regulatory requirements vary by country, product may not be available in
your geographic area. PCR and ELISA kits availability/distribution:
Outside the U.S. and Canada
Product picture: www.hausdorf-art.com
Pathogen type |
Bacteria |
Product contents |
1 Microtiter plate with 96 wells (coated with Anaplasma antigen), Sample dilution buffer, Wash buffer (10x concentrate), Conjugate solution, Substrate solution, Stop solution, Positive control serum, Negative control serum |
Product Type |
Ready-to-use assay |
Manufacturer |
afosa GmbH - part of INDICAL |
Species |
Dog |
Pathogen investigated |
Anaplasma phagocytophilum (Anaplasmosis) |
Technology |
ELISA |