88461-9
Babesia microti and B. divergens+MO-1 and B. duncani 18S rRNA gene panel - Blood by NAA with non-probe detection
Active
88452-8 Babesia microti 18S rRNA gene [Presence] in Blood by NAA with non-probe detection
Part Descriptions
LP264278-5 Babesia microti 18S rRNA gene
Babesia microti is a parasite that invades human red blood cells and is transmitted by the Ixodid scapularis tick. Infection by the Babesia species was first discovered in Croatia in 1957, but has proven to exist across the world in the last fifty years. B. microti is the most common babesiosis parasite in the United States. It was first discovered in the Northeast, but has spread to counties of the lower Hudson River Valley of New York State and on to the upper Midwest. Thirty-five patients were reported to be infected with B. microti by the Minnesota Department of Health in 2009. The Babesia parasites possess vesicles that secrete enzymes that facilitates its entrance into the host erythrocytes. They reproduces asexually in red blood cells and sexually in the Ixodid scapularis tick. Infection with Babesia leads to a wide range and severity of symptoms. Symptoms that are characterized as mild to moderate include fever, fatigue, chills, sweats, headache, myalgia, anorexia cough, arthralgia and nausea. Symptoms of severe illness are seen most often in patients who are immunosuppressed due to infections like Human immunodeficiency virus and conditions such as cancer. Severe symptoms of Babesia infection include respiratory failure, disseminated intravascular coagulation, congestive heart failure, liver and renal failure, and splenic infarction. There are several ways to diagnose infections with Babesia including thick and thin smear analysis, polymerase chain reaction, indirect immunofluorescence antibody, and by injecting patient blood into a hamster and waiting for severe parasitemia to develop in 2-4 weeks. Treatment of Babesia infection is with antibiotics or exchange transfusion when the parasite load in the blood becomes very high. PMID: 18755385[https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/64/11/1622/3067352/Possible-TransfusionTransmitted-Babesia] PMID: 22170915
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Babesia microti 18S rRNA gene
- Property
- PrThr
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Bld
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
- Non-probe.amp.tar
Additional Names
- Short Name
- B microti 18S rRNA Bld Ql NAA+non-probe
- Display Name
- B. microti 18S rRNA gene NAA+non-probe Ql (Bld)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Babesia microti 18S rRNA gene, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- MICRO
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.64
- Last Updated
- Version 2.64
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
Example Answer List LL360-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Positive Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:10828004 Positive (qualifier value) | LA6576-8 | ||
Negative Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:260385009 Negative (qualifier value) | LA6577-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
88461-9 | Babesia microti and B. divergens+MO-1 and B. duncani 18S rRNA gene panel - Blood by NAA with non-probe detection |
101647-6 | Ehrlichiosis and Anaplasmosis and Babesiosis and Borrelia miyamotoi DNA panel - Serum, Plasma or Blood by NAA with probe detection |
Member of these Groups Get Info
LOINC Group | Group Name |
---|---|
LG41637-6 | Babesia |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Gen rRNA 18S Babesia microti: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Gen de ARNr de Babesia microti 18S: |
fr-FR | French (France) | Babesia microti ARNr 18S gène: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Babesia microti, gene 18S rRNA: Synonyms: Amplificazione target non basata su sonda Gene 18S rRNA di babesia microti Microbiologia Presenza o Soglia Punto nel tempo (episodio) Sangue Sonda con amplificazione Sonda con amplificazione del target Sonda di DNA |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 鼠源巴贝斯虫 18S rRNA 基因: Synonyms: Gen-Probe rRNA 探针法.扩增.靶向 依次型; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
88451-0 Babesia duncani 18S rRNA gene [Presence] in Blood by NAA with non-probe detection
Part Descriptions
LP264281-9 Babesia duncani 18S rRNA gene
Babesia duncani is a parasite that invades human red blood cells and is transmitted by the Ixodid tick. Infection by the Babesia species was first discovered in Croatia in 1957, but has proven to exist across the world in the last fifty years. B. duncani primarily infects humans who live in Washington state and California. The Babesia parasites possess vesicles that secrete enzymes that facilitates its entrance into the host erythrocytes. They reproduces asexually in red blood cells and sexually in the Ixodid tick. Infection with Babesia leads to a wide range and severity of symptoms. Symptoms that are characterized as mild to moderate include fever, fatigue, chills, sweats, headache, myalgia, anorexia cough, arthralgia and nausea. Symptoms of severe illness are seen most often in patients who are immunosuppressed due to infections like Human immunodeficiency virus and conditions such as cancer. Severe symptoms of Babesia infection include respiratory failure, disseminated intravascular coagulation, congestive heart failure, liver and renal failure, and splenic infarction. Infection with Babesia duncani tends to cause symptoms that are moderate to severe. There are several ways to diagnose infections with Babesia including thick and thin smear analysis, polymerase chain reaction, indirect immunofluorescence antibody, and by injecting patient blood into a hamster and waiting for severe parasitemia to develop in 2-4 weeks. Treatment of Babesia infection is with antibiotics. PMID: 18755385
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Babesia duncani 18S rRNA gene
- Property
- PrThr
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Bld
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
- Non-probe.amp.tar
Additional Names
- Short Name
- B duncani 18S rRNA Bld Ql NAA+non-probe
- Display Name
- B. duncani 18S rRNA gene NAA+non-probe Ql (Bld)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Babesia duncani 18S rRNA gene, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- MICRO
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.64
- Last Updated
- Version 2.64
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
Example Answer List LL360-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Positive Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:10828004 Positive (qualifier value) | LA6576-8 | ||
Negative Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:260385009 Negative (qualifier value) | LA6577-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
88461-9 | Babesia microti and B. divergens+MO-1 and B. duncani 18S rRNA gene panel - Blood by NAA with non-probe detection |
101647-6 | Ehrlichiosis and Anaplasmosis and Babesiosis and Borrelia miyamotoi DNA panel - Serum, Plasma or Blood by NAA with probe detection |
Member of these Groups Get Info
LOINC Group | Group Name |
---|---|
LG41637-6 | Babesia |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Gen rRNA 18S Babesia duncani: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Gen de ARNr 18S de Babesia duncani: |
fr-FR | French (France) | Babesia duncani ARNr 18S gène: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Babesia duncani 18S rRNA, gene: Synonyms: Amplificazione target non basata su sonda Gene 18S rRNA di babesia duncani Microbiologia Presenza o Soglia Punto nel tempo (episodio) Sangue Sonda con amplificazione Sonda con amplificazione del target Sonda di DNA |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 邓肯巴贝斯虫 18S rRNA 基因: Synonyms: Gen-Probe rRNA 探针法.扩增.靶向 依次型; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
88450-2 Babesia divergens+MO-1 strain 18S rRNA gene [Presence] in Blood by NAA with non-probe detection
Part Descriptions
LP265757-7 Babesia divergens+MO-1 strain 18S rRNA gene
Babesia divergens-like MO-1 strain is a parasite that invades human red blood cells and is transmitted by the Ixodid tick. Infection by the Babesia species was first discovered in Croatia in 1957, but has proven to exist across the world in the last fifty years. B. divergens-like Missouri strain primarily infects humans who live in Missouri, Kentucky, and Washington state. The Babesia parasites possess vesicles that secrete enzymes that facilitates its entrance into the host erythrocytes. They reproduces asexually in red blood cells and sexually in the Ixodid tick. Infection with Babesia leads to a wide range and severity of symptoms. Symptoms that are characterized as mild to moderate include fever, fatigue, chills, sweats, headache, myalgia, anorexia cough, arthralgia and nausea. Symptoms of severe illness are seen most often in patients who are immunosuppressed due to infections like Human immunodeficiency virus and conditions such as cancer. Severe symptoms of Babesia infection include respiratory failure, disseminated intravascular coagulation, congestive heart failure, liver and renal failure, and splenic infarction. Infection with Babesia divergens-like Missouri strain consistently causes symptoms that are life threatening. There are several ways to diagnose infections with Babesia including thick and thin smear analysis, polymerase chain reaction, indirect immunofluorescence antibody, and by injecting patient blood into a hamster and waiting for severe parasitemia to develop in 2-4 weeks. Treatment of Babesia infection is with antibiotics or exchange transfusion when the parasite load in the blood becomes very high. PMID: 18755385[https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/64/11/1622/3067352/Possible-TransfusionTransmitted-Babesia]
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Babesia divergens+MO-1 strain 18S rRNA gene
- Property
- PrThr
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Bld
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
- Non-probe.amp.tar
Additional Names
- Short Name
- B div+MO-1 18S rRNA Bld Ql NAA+non-probe
- Display Name
- B. divergens+MO-1 strain 18S rRNA gene NAA+non-probe Ql (Bld)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Babesia divergens+MO-1 strain 18S rRNA gene, Blood
Basic Attributes
- Class
- MICRO
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.64
- Last Updated
- Version 2.64
- Order vs. Observation
- Both
Example Answer List LL360-9
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Positive Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:10828004 Positive (qualifier value) | LA6576-8 | ||
Negative Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:260385009 Negative (qualifier value) | LA6577-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
88461-9 | Babesia microti and B. divergens+MO-1 and B. duncani 18S rRNA gene panel - Blood by NAA with non-probe detection |
101647-6 | Ehrlichiosis and Anaplasmosis and Babesiosis and Borrelia miyamotoi DNA panel - Serum, Plasma or Blood by NAA with probe detection |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Gen rRNA 18S + MO-1 strain de Babesia divergens: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Babesia divergens + gen de ARNr de la cepa 18S de MO-1: |
fr-FR | French (France) | Babesia divergens+MO-1 ARNr 18S gène: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Babesia divergens+MO-1, colorazione: Synonyms: Amplificazione target non basata su sonda Microbiologia Presenza o Soglia Punto nel tempo (episodio) Sangue Sonda con amplificazione Sonda con amplificazione del target Sonda di DNA |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 分歧巴贝斯虫+MO-1 株 18S rRNA 基因: Synonyms: Ⅰ Gen-Probe I rRNA 探针法.扩增.靶向 依次型; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.