What does ANA titer 1 mean?
The ANA test is used specifically for the diagnosis of systemic lupus erythematosis (SLE). A positive ANA titer (> 1:80) with the associated clinical signs (e.g. skin disease, polyarthritis) and laboratory findings (e.g. proteinuria, thrombocytopenia) is diagnostic for SLE.
What does a centromere ANA pattern mean?
Anti-centromere pattern This specific speckled pattern is due to antibodies to the centromere and results in exactly 46 nuclear speckles. Anti-centromere antibodies are associated with the CREST syndrome, a limited variant of the disease scleroderma. The latter is also known as systemic sclerosis.
What is a normal ANA titer pattern?
A positive ANA test is usually reported as both a ratio (called a titer) and a pattern, such as smooth or speckled. Certain diseases are more likely to have certain patterns. The higher the titer, the more likely the result is a “true positive” result, meaning you have significant ANAs and an autoimmune disease.
What is centromere antibody positive?
A positive test for centromere antibodies is strongly associated with CREST syndrome. The presence of detectable levels of centromere antibodies may antedate the appearance of diagnostic clinical features of CREST syndrome by several years.
What does a 1 160 ANA titer mean?
Titers ≥ 1:160 usually indicate the presence of active SLE, although occasionally other autoimmune disease may induce these high titers. There are now known groups of ANA-negative lupus patients.
What does an ANA titer of 1 100 mean?
A laboratory that begins at 1:40 may call a test positive, while a laboratory that begins at 1:100 would call it negative. Most lupus patients have very strongly positive tests – essentially always more than 1:80, often more than 1:5120. Most laboratories count 1:80 and higher as clearly positive.
What causes centromere?
Centromere antibodies occur primarily in patients with the calcinosis, Raynaud phenomenon, esophageal dysfunction, sclerodactyly, and telangiectasis (CREST) syndrome variant of systemic sclerosis (scleroderma).
What is centromere antibody negative?
A negative result indicates no detectable IgG antibodies to centromere B. If the result is negative but clinical suspicion for SSc is strong, consider testing for ANA by IFA along with other antibodies associated with SSc, including Scl-70, U3-RNP, PM/Scl, or Th/To.