no.
You have dengue disease. See a doctor.
It means Dengue...
Can patient of Australia Antigen have the physical relationship with spouse.
Test: PCR (early in infection, not commercially available), , MAC ELISA (in kits but can't tell between stereotypes, IgG ELISA (past infections, but can't determine stereotypes, NS1 ELISA ( can diagnose acute dengue), and PRINT (can tell stereotypes).
HBs antigen is an acronym for Hepatits B like antigens found in the blood cells They are the ones that assist the body to respond to any foreign antibody pertaining to that antigen.
HBsAg stands for hepatitis B surface antigen, a marker for hepatitis B virus infection. A reactive result indicates presence of the antigen in the blood. The 5898 value is the concentration of the antigen detected, measured in reactive units. COI stands for cutoff index, indicating the level of antibody concentration above which a test is considered positive. This result suggests an active hepatitis B infection.
1)prepare the blood plate(black background). 2)add one drop serum 3)add antigen (o,H,AH,BH) 4)mix the antigen and serum. 5)rotate the sample (1 min) 6)result:positive reactive :negative non-reactive
A namespace is a group of related identifiers.namespace ns {int i;double d;}Inside namespace ns, i and d can be used normally. Outside namespace ns, i is called ns::i and d is called ns::d. To import i into the current scope, say "using ns::i;". To import all identifiers in ns into the current scope, say "using namespace ns;". Namespaces can be nested:namespace ns1 {namespace ns2 {int i;}int i;}The i in namespace ns1 is fully qualified as ns1::i. The i in namespace ns2 is fully qualified as ns1::ns2::i. The two variables are distinct. Inside ns2, i refers to ns1::ns2::i; inside ns1, i refers to ns1::i.
ns1 or ns2
THE REASON FOR THE POSITIVE SERUM IS BECAUSE SHE HAS BEEN VACCINATED. SAD I agree but why is that sad?
Antigens.
In immunology, this refers to an antigen and an antibody combining. In chemistry, this refers to a molecule, atom, or radical having a chemical reaction with another molecule, atom, or compound.