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DRG® TSH ELISA, DRG International, Inc.
DRG® TSH ELISA, DRG International, Inc.
Catalog # 75871-092
Supplier:  DRG International
CAS Number:  
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DRG® TSH ELISA, DRG International, Inc.
Catalog # 75871-092
Supplier:  DRG International
Supplier Number:  EIA-4171R
CAS Number:  
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Specifications

  • Assay Type:
    Sandwich
  • Host:
  • Primary antibody reactivity:
  • Target protein:
    Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
  • Description:
    TSH ELISA
  • Environmentally Preferable:
  • Detection Range:
    0-15 mlU/l
  • Application:
    Thyroid Function
  • Regulatory Status:
    FDA Regulated; CE Approved
  • Cat. No.:
    75871-092
  • Supplier no.:
    EIA-4171
  • No. of tests:
    96 wells

Specifications

About this item

An enzyme immunoassay for the quantitative measurement of TSH in serum or plasma.

  • High quality assays with reproducible and reliable results
  • Ready-to-use reagents with internal controls
  • Very good precision and sensitivity
  • Short assay time and incubation steps at room temperature
  • Simple and technician friendly tests

Measurement of the serum concentration of thyrotropin (TSH), a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 28,000 daltons and secreted from the anterior pituitary, is generally regarded as the most sensitive indicator available for the diagnosis of primary and secondary (pituitary) hypothyroidism

The DRG TSH ELISA Kit is a solid phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) based on the sandwich principle. The microtiter wells are coated with a monoclonal [mouse] antibody directed towards a unique antigenic site of the TSH molecule. An aliquot of patient sample containing endogenous TSH is incubated in the coated well with enzyme conjugate, which is an anti-TSH antibody conjugated with horseradish peroxidase. After incubation the unbound conjugate is washed off. The amount of bound peroxidase is proportional to the concentration of TSH in the sample. Having added the substrate solution, the intensity of colour developed is proportional to the concentration of TSH in the patient sample.

Increase in serum concentrations of TSH, which is primarily responsible for the synthesis and release of thyroid hormones, is an early and sensitive indicator of decrease thyroid reserve and in conjunction with decreased thyroxine (T4) concentrations is diagnostic of primary hypothyroidism. The expected increase in TSH concentrations demonstrates the classical negative feedback system between the pituitary and thyroid glands. That is, primary thyroid gland failure reduces secretion of the thyroid hormones, which in turn stimulates the release of TSH from the pituitary. Additionally, TSH measurements are equally useful in differentiating secondary and tertiary (hypothalamic) hypothyroidism from the primary thyroid disease. TSH release from the pituitary is regulated by thyrotropin releasing factor (TRH), which is secreted by the hypothalamus, and by direct action of T4 and triiodothyronine (T3), the thyroid hormones, at the pituitary. Increase levels of T3 and T4 reduces the response of the pituitary to the stimulatory effects of TRH. In secondary and tertiary hypothyroidism, concentrations of T4 are usually low and TSH levels are generally low or normal. Either pituitary TSH deficiency (secondary hypothyroidism) or insufficiency of stimulation of the pituitary by TRH (tertiary hypothyroidism) causes this. The TRH stimulation test differentiates these conditions. In secondary hypothyroidism, TSH response to TRH is blunted while a normal or delayed response is obtained in tertiary hypothyroidism. Further, the advent of immunoenzymometric assays has provided the laboratory with sufficient sensitivity to enable the differentiating of hyperthyroidism from euthyroid population and extending the usefulness of TSH measurements. This method is a second-generation assay, which provide the means for discrimination in the hyperthyroid-euthyroid range.