Complement fixation test
The complement fixation test is an immunological medical test that can be used to detect the presence of either specific antibody or specific antigen in a patient's serum, based on whether complement fixation occurs. It was widely used to diagnose infections, particularly with microbes that are not easily detected by culture methods, and in rheumatic diseases. However, in clinical diagnostics labs it has been largely superseded by other serological methods such as ELISA and by DNA-based methods of pathogen detection, particularly PCR.
Process
The complement system is a system of serum proteins that react with antigen-antibody complexes. If this reaction occurs on a cell surface, it will result in the formation of trans-membrane pores and therefore destruction of the cell. The basic steps of a complement fixation test are as follows:- Serum is separated from the patient.
- Patients naturally have different levels of complement proteins in their serum. To negate any effects this might have on the test, the complement proteins in the patient's serum must be destroyed and replaced by a known amount of standardized complement proteins.
- # The serum is heated in such a way that all of the complement proteins—but none of the antibodies—within it are destroyed.
- # A known amount of standard complement proteins are added to the serum.
- The antigen of interest is added to the serum.
- Sheep red blood cells which have been pre-bound to anti- antibodies are added to the serum. The test is considered negative if the solution turns pink at this point and positive otherwise.