Guest guest Posted August 27, 2010 Report Share Posted August 27, 2010 Most specialists will want to see a panel done before the appointment. There is a 12 titer lab and a 23 titer lab. Response can be determined by two ways. Either a response between pre and post vaccination labs of a set level. Usually 2 is the number. Or some doctors want to see a fold response. Which means even if the level is under 2 if it tripled then that is considered response. It is best to send the pre and post blood draws together. Labeled as such. That way the same tech and processing protocol are used on both. Technique is everything. Ursula Mom to (17) and Macey (15) http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/maceyholleman http://maceysjourney.blogspot.com ________________________________ From: myasdprofile <asdmommy@...> Sent: Fri, August 27, 2010 4:35:28 AM Subject: Question regarding Selective Antibody Deficiency testing Hi, Sorry if this is a very basic question for the experienced members on the board. I am trying to determine if my son might have selective antibody deficiency due to an impaired response to polysaccharide vaccines. We recently checked his titers to HiB, MMR, Varicella, Polio, DTaP vaccines. His titers to Pertussis and Polio are negligible. Could this give him a diagnosis of selective antibody deficiency? If not, what criteria qualifies one for selective antibody deficiency? Do I also need to ask my pediatrician to order a test for S. Pneumoniae titers (from his pneumococcal vaccine) before the diagnosis can be made? I would really appreciate any guidance. Thanks Sarita Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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