Results 11 to 20 of about 156,525 (292)
Lateral Flow Assays in Infectious Disease Diagnosis [PDF]
Abstract Background Lateral flow immunoassays are widely used as diagnostic tests in many applications in human and other diagnostic areas. Assays for human applications have been commercially available since the 1980s and initially were primarily used to identify pregnancy by measuring human ...
Boehringer HR, O'Farrell BJ.
exaly +5 more sources
Toward Next Generation Lateral Flow Assays: Integration of Nanomaterials [PDF]
Ruslan Alvarez-Diduk +2 more
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Immobilizing and Patterning DNA on Simplified Protein-Free DNA-Based Lateral Flow Assays [PDF]
Hyunbin Lee +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Lateral flow assays (lateral flow immunoassays and nucleic acid lateral flow assays) have experienced a great boom in a wide variety of early diagnostic and screening applications.
Zidane Qriouet +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Lateral flow assays (LFAs) are the technology behind low-cost, simple, rapid and portable detection devices popular in biomedicine, agriculture, food and environmental sciences. This review presents an overview of the principle of the method and the critical components of the assay, focusing on lateral flow immunoassays. This type of assay has recently
Koczula, Katarzyna M., Gallotta, Andrea
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Lateral flow assays for hormone detection
Lateral flow assays (LFAs) have gained momentum for hormone biosensing, offering significant advantages over conventional techniques. This review demonstrates recent advances driving LFAs to the forefront of modern point-of-care hormone biosensing.
Leena Khelifa +3 more
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Point-of-Care Diagnoses and Assays Based on Lateral Flow Test
Analytical devices for point-of-care diagnoses are highly desired and would improve quality of life when first diagnoses are made early and pathologies are recognized soon.
Miroslav Pohanka
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This paper proposes that the signal intensity of a lateral flow assay (LFA) strip can be increased by pressing the top of the strip, effectively reducing its flow rate. The reduced flow rate allows more time for antigen-antibody interactions to occur, resulting in increased signal intensity and an improved detection limit.
Se Been Park, Joong Ho Shin
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A simple version of immunochemical-based methods is the Lateral Flow Assay (LFA). It is a dry chemistry technique (reagents are included); the fluid from the sample runs through a porous membrane (often nitrocellulose) by capillary force. Typically the membrane is cut as a strip of 0.5*5 cm.
Posthuma-Trumpie, G.A. +1 more
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CrAg lateral flow assay for cryptococcosis [PDF]
Importance of field: Cryptococcal meningitis is a leading cause of death globally among people with AIDS. In sub-Saharan Africa, cryptococcosis is estimated to kill more people than tuberculosis. Cryptococcosis is also an important infectious disease among immunosuppressed patients in countries with advanced medical care.
Thomas R, Kozel, Sean K, Bauman
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