CRP Test Kit 25 Tests (Microsidd)
Lab Supplies

CRP Test Kit 25 Tests (Microsidd)

Pack Sizes Available

25 tests per kit
50 tests per kit
100 tests per kit

Product Description

There is a category of laboratory test that earns its place in every diagnostic setting from the most sophisticated reference laboratory to the most resource-limited rural clinic. The CRP latex test is one of them. It requires no instrument, no electricity, no cold chain for the test itself, and produces a result in three minutes that is as clinically useful in triage as a result that takes three hours on an automated analyser. C-Reactive Protein (CRP) is synthesised by the liver and released into the bloodstream in response to inflammation, infection, or tissue injury. Its serum concentration rises within hours of an acute inflammatory event and falls rapidly when the trigger resolves. This rapid kinetic makes it a useful marker for detecting active inflammation, monitoring treatment response, and differentiating bacterial from viral infection in clinical decision-making. Microsidd's CRP Test Kit uses the latex agglutination slide test principle — one of the most established and validated methods in clinical serology. Latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies agglutinate (clump visibly) when mixed with patient serum containing CRP above the detection threshold (typically 6 mg/L). The test is read visually under a light source after the three-minute reaction time. Positive agglutination is clear and unambiguous; negative results show no agglutination. Semi-quantitative titration is possible by diluting the sample and reading the endpoint. The 25-test kit format is the standard for smaller laboratories and clinic-based testing. Larger 50 and 100-test kits are available for higher-volume settings. For laboratory supply distributors, CRP latex kits are a steady consumption item across pathology labs, hospitals, and polyclinics in every export market. Sara Wellness exports diagnostic test kits including serology reagents to laboratory distributors internationally.

Technical Specifications

  • Test Principle: Latex agglutination slide test (anti-CRP antibody-coated latex particles)
  • Detection Sensitivity: 6 mg/L (qualitative threshold)
  • Reaction Time: 3 minutes (read at exactly 3 minutes)
  • Sample Type: Human serum (clear, non-haemolysed)
  • Kit Contents: Latex CRP reagent, positive and negative controls, test slides, stirring sticks
  • Pack Sizes: 25 tests (standard); 50 and 100 tests available
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

C-Reactive Protein (CRP) is a protein produced by the liver in response to inflammation, infection, or tissue damage. Its serum level rises significantly within 6-8 hours of acute inflammation and can reach 20 times or more above normal levels. CRP testing is used to detect active inflammation or infection, monitor response to treatment (particularly antibiotics for bacterial infections), and differentiate bacterial from viral infections in clinical settings.

The test uses latex particles coated with anti-CRP antibodies. When patient serum containing CRP is mixed with the latex reagent on a test slide, the CRP antigen binds to the anti-CRP antibodies on the latex surface. This cross-links the latex particles and causes visible agglutination (clumping). The reaction is read after exactly three minutes under a light source. Agglutination indicates CRP above the test's detection threshold.

The Microsidd CRP latex slide test detects CRP at concentrations above approximately 6 mg/L. At this concentration, agglutination becomes visible at the standard undiluted testing concentration. By performing serial dilutions of the positive sample with glycine-saline buffer and reading the last dilution that gives agglutination, the test provides a semi-quantitative result. Most healthy individuals have CRP below 1 mg/L.

The Microsidd CRP test uses human serum as the primary sample. The serum should be clear, non-haemolysed, and free of lipid turbidity. The latex reagent should not be used with plasma, as anticoagulants can affect the reaction. Samples should be processed fresh or stored at 2-8°C for up to 24 hours, or frozen at -20°C for longer-term storage.

The CRP latex reaction reading must be taken at exactly 3 minutes. If the reaction mixture dries before being read, evaporation of the fluid can cause apparent granularity that resembles agglutination, producing a false positive result. If the reaction is read too early, weak positive reactions may be missed. Using a timer and reading precisely at 3 minutes is mandatory for accurate interpretation.

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