Techniques
Antibodies
Unique Features
Reaction
Test Results
100

A technique that may miss weak antibodies by reducing reaction strength.

What is a prewarm?

100

Reacts with antigens of high frequency in the population.

What is a high-titer, low avidity antibody?

100

An antibody that reacts at IS phase but disappears following incubation and AHG phases?

What is anti-Lea?

100

Indicates the class of antibody based on IS, 37 C and AHG.

What is the phase of reaction?

100

Check transfusion and pregnancy history

What is the first step in a positive screen?

200

Red cells used in an autoadsorption to remove antibody from the serum.

What are patient red cells?

200

Antibodies that are not ABO antibodies and require previous transfusion and/or pregnancy to occur.

What are atypical antibodies? 

200

Antibodies that are enhanced with enzymes.

What are Rh system antibodies?

200

IgM

What antibody class is positive at IS phase of an IAT?

200

Reagents used when the DAT is positive with polyspecific AHG?

What are monospecific anti-IgG and anti-C3 reagents?

300

A technique that disassociates IgG antibodies from red cells for further identification.

What is an elution?

300

Enzymes that are not used in routine screening as they may destroy some antigens causing missed antibody reactions. 

What are proteolytic enzymes?

300

An antibody that is not produced against a low-incidence antigen.

What is anti-Vel?

300

IgG

What antibody class is positive at the incubation and AHG phases of the IAT? 

300

On ruling out and matching the pattern, if only one cell is identified.

What is to test two more cells?

400

When a patients serum and Lewis substance reaction is negative (0) and the patients serum and saline control is positive (1+).

What is a neutralized antibody?

400

DTT (dithiothreitol)

What is the reagent useful for identifying ALL Kell blood group system antibodies?

400

The typical specificity of cold autoantibodies.

What is anti-I?

400

Extend incubation time, increase serum-to-cell ratio, use potentiators like PEG.

What can be done to increase sensitivity of an antibody screen in a compatibility test?

400

If a patient has a confirmed antibody but has phenotyped with the same antigen on their red blood cells.

Investigate recent transfusion history

500

The release of uncrossmatched, group O, D negative, RBC units without a patient sample.

What is an emergency release?

500

A medication likely to cause the production of autoantibodies

What is Methyldropa?

500

THIS QUESTOINS IS NOT IN A CATEGORY!!!

3%

How much does 1 unit of blood increase the hematocrit? 

500

No prior or existing clinically significant antibodies are present. 

When IS cross match is acceptable?

500

Positive DAT, False positive Fya, crossmatch incompatible at AHG.

What is autoimmune hemolytic anemia?