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Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of Australia antigen and antibody by means of radioimmunoassay techniques.

John H. Walsh, +2 more
- 01 May 1970 - 
- Vol. 121, Iss: 5, pp 550-554
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TLDR
It has been shown that the presence of anti-Au does not always prevent the development of hepatitis, and it has been possible to identify Au in some but not all units of blood that have induced hepatitis.
Abstract
Australia antigen (Au) has been identified in the blood of patients with "long-incubation hepatitis" by use of agar-gel diffusion or complement fixation (CF) [1-6]. Characterization of the antigen as a viruslike particle and its localization in the nuclei of liver cells of patients with hepatitis have provided evidence that Au may be the agent of long-incubation hepatitis [7-11]. A precipitating and complement-fixing antibody to Au (anti-Au) has been identified in the serum of patients who have received multiple transfusions but rarely, if ever, in serum from patients convalescing from hepatitis [1-3, 5-12]. It has been shown that the presence of anti-Au does not always prevent the development of hepatitis [13]. Transfusion of blood containing Au may result in hepatitis in the recipient [3, 12]. With agar-gel diffusion, it has been possible to identify Au in some but not all units of blood that have induced

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Immune Response in Patients Who Received Blood Containing Serum Hepatitis Antigen

TL;DR: An investigation of patterns of immune response as shown by passive HA technique in 35 patients inadvertently transfused with blood containing SH antigen, finding thatSerological evidence of infection with hepatitis virus type B has been obtained in 34 of the 35 patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hepatitis--associated antigen in aboriginal groups in Northern Australia.

TL;DR: Immunodiffusion tests detected hepatitis‐associated antigen in Australian Aboriginal adults and children and in Torres Strait Islander adults and adults, in a much higher proportion of the communities than has been found in Australian blood donors.
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Avian Oncornavirus Group-Specific Antigen: Detection and Quantification by Radioimmunoassay

TL;DR: Standard curves showed the lower limit of sensitivity to be 2 to 10 ng of unlabeled protein when labeled antigen of 2,000 to 5,000 counts per min per ng of specific activity was used in the assay.
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Biologic false-positive reactions in serologic tests for syphilis in narcotic addiction. Reduced incidence during methadone maintenance treatment.

TL;DR: Biologic false-positive tests for syphilis was found in 23% of 69 New York heroin addicts, and after 23 ± 7 months of methadone maintenance treatment, BFP decreased to 5.8%.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Liver and the Antigens of Hepatitis B

TL;DR: The relation between type B virus and the liver is both destructive (leading to severe acute hepatic disease and eventually to cirrhosis) and symbiotic (existing among carriers who have neither liver disease nor symptoms).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The preparation of 131i-labelled human growth hormone of high specific radioactivity

TL;DR: The loss of immunological reactivity at high specific radioactivities or at high levels of chemical substitution with STAI/sup 127/!iodine is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immunoassay of endogenous plasma insulin in man

TL;DR: The insulin concentration in plasma has been estimated from the degree of hypoglycemia produced in hypophysectomized, adrenalectomization, alloxan-diabetic rats, and from the increased oxidation of glucose-1-C14 by the rat epididymal fat pad.
Journal ArticleDOI

An antigen detected in the blood during the incubation period of serum hepatitis

TL;DR: An antigen that reacted in the immunodiffusion test with serum from multiply transfused patients was detected in the blood during the incubation period prior to the onset of major chemical or clinical abnormalities, suggesting this antigen is specific for serum hepatitis virus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Particles associated with Australia Antigen in the Sera of Patients with Leukaemia, Down's Syndrome and Hepatitis

TL;DR: The precipitin band which forms between the haemophilia antiserum and the serum containing Australia antigen stains faintly with sudan black, indicating that the antigen contains lipid.
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