Read Time: | 10-15mins | Test Parameter: | HIV1/2, Syphilis TP |
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Principle: | Immunochromatography | Storage: | Room Temperature 2-30℃ |
Origin: | China | Sample: | Whole Blood Serum Plasma |
Highlight: | HIV SYP Rapid Test Kit,Whole Blood HIV 1/2 Rapid Test Kit,15mins HIV 1/2 Rapid Test Kit |
INTENDED USE
MAIN CONTENTS
Rapid Test Cassette in Pouch
Buffer
Disposable dropper
Package insert
PRECAUTIONS
SRORAGE
Store as packaged in the sealed pouch at room temperature or refrigerated (2-30°C).
The test is stable through the expiration date printed on the sealed pouch.
The test must remain in the sealed pouch until use.
DO NOT FREEZE.
Do not use beyond the expiration date.
OPERATION
Bring tests, specimens, and/or controls to room temperature (15-30°C) before use.
1.Remove the test from its sealed pouch, and place it on a clean, level surface. Label the test with patient or control identification. For best results, the assay should be performed within one hour.
2.Using the provided disposable dropper, transfer 2 drops of serum/plasma to specimen well (S) of the cassette, then start the timer.
OR
Transfer 1 drop of whole blood specimen to specimen well (S) of the cassette with the provided disposable dropper, then add 1 drop of buffer and start the timer.
OR
Allow 2 hanging drops of fingerstick whole blood specimen to fall into the center of specimen well (S) on the cassette, then add 1 drop of buffer and start the timer.
Avoid trapping air bubbles in the specimen well (S), and do not add any solution to the result area.
As the test begins to work, color will migrate across the membrane.
3. Wait for the colored band(s) to appear. The result should be read at 10 minutes. Do not interpret the result after 20 minutes.
Questions about HIV:
1 | What happens when you are HIV positive? | When a person becomes infected with HIV,the virus attacks and weakens the immune system. As the immune system weakens, the person is at risk for getting life-threatening infections and cancers. When that happens, the illness is called AIDS. Once a person has the virus, it stays inside the body for life. |
2 | How long do HIV patients live? | Key points.With the right treatment and care, people with HIV can live a normal lifespan. People who have a good response to HIV treatment have excellent long-term prospects. You can increase your life expectancy by not smoking and having a healthy lifestyle. |
3 | How does HIV affect your life? | People with HIV have a higher chance of developing mood, anxiety, and cognitive disorders. For example, depression is one of the most common mental health conditions faced by people with HIV. It is important to remember that mental disorders are treatable. People who have a mental disorder can recover. |
4 | Can you live with HIV without knowing? | Most people experience a short flu-like illness 2 to 6 weeks after HIV infection, which lasts for a week or 2. After these symptoms disappear, HIV may not cause any symptoms for many years, although the virus continues to damage your immune system. This means many people with HIV do not know they're infected. |
5 | What to do if positive for HIV? | The first step after testing positive for HIV is to see a health care provider, even if you do not feel sick. Prompt medical care and treatment with HIV medicines as soon as possible is the best way to stay healthy. |
6 | Can I stay with HIV positive person? | People with HIV who take HIV medicine exactly as prescribed and get and keep an undetectable viral load can stay healthy and will not transmit HIV to their HIV-negative partners through sex. |
7 | How long can HIV stay alive? | HIV lives the longest in a syringe at room temperature, but can still live up to 7 days at higher temperatures. |
8 | Can HIV be cured? | There's no cure for HIV / AIDS . Once you have the infection, your body can't get rid of it. But there are medicines that can control HIV and prevent complications. Everyone diagnosed with HIV should take antiretroviral therapy medicines, also called ART. |
9 | Can people with HIV have kids? | A diagnosis of HIV does not mean you can't have children. But you can pass HIV to your baby during the pregnancy, while in labor, while giving birth, or by breastfeeding. The good news is that there are many ways to lower the risk of passing HIV to your unborn baby to almost zero. |
10 | What are the 7 warning signs of HIV? | Symptoms Fever. Headache. Muscle aches and joint pain. Rash. Sore throat and painful mouth sores. Swollen lymph glands, also called nodes, mainly on the neck. Diarrhea. Weight loss. ect. |
11 | Who is most at risk for HIV? | people with a current or previous partner with HIV. people with a current or previous partner who is from an area with high HIV rates. people who are from an area with high HIV rates. people who engage in chemsex (using drugs to help or enhance sex) men who have unprotected sex with men. |
12 | What is the main first symptom of HIV? | The early signs and symptoms of HIV infection tend to be nonspecific. Within days or weeks of exposure to the virus, a person may notice flu-like symptoms, a rash, and fatigue. Less commonly, mouth ulcers, nausea, and other symptoms may occur. |
13 | What is the best country to live in with HIV? | Australia and northern European countries are doing far better than North America at retaining people living with HIV in care and achieving viral suppression, according to a comprehensive survey of 'treatment cascades' in high-income countries presented on Tuesday at the HIV Drug Therapy Glasgow conference |
14 | How do you know if a female has HIV? | HIV symptoms in cisgender women and others assigned female at birth (AFAB) can range from common flu-like symptoms to skin changes, mood fluctuations, menstrual irregularities, and recurrent vaginal infections. Early symptoms of HIV may be mild and easily dismissed. |
15 | How many years can a person live with HIV? | Since then, new antiretroviral drugs have been developed and added to existing antiretroviral therapy. This has resulted in a highly effective HIV treatment regimen. In 1996, the total life expectancy for a 20-year-old person with HIV was 39 years. In 2011, the total life expectancy bumped up to about 70 years. |
16 | What food is not good for HIV patients? | HIV and Nutrition and Food Safety | NIH Do not eat or drink the following foods: Raw eggs or foods that contain raw eggs, for example, homemade cookie dough. Raw or undercooked poultry, meat, and seafood. Unpasteurized milk or dairy products and fruit juices. |
17 | What celebrities are living with HIV? | Celebrities Who Revealed They Are HIV Positive - Business Insider Since the HIV and AIDS crisis in the '80s, stars have come forward to reveal they are HIV positive. Jonathan Van Ness, Magic Johnson, and Charlie Sheen are living with HIV. "Pose" star Billy Porter revealed last year that he has been HIV positive since 2007. |
Questions about Syphilis:
1 | Can syphilis be cured? | Syphilis is simple to cure when it's found and treated in its early stages. The preferred treatment at all stages is penicillin. This antibiotic medicine can kill the bacteria that causes syphilis. If you're allergic to penicillin, your health care team may suggest another antibiotic. |
2 | What are the four symptoms of syphilis? | These syphilis symptoms may come and go for up to 2 years. They include body rashes that last 2 – 6 weeks — often on the palms of your hands and the soles of your feet. There are lots of other symptoms, including mild fever, fatigue, sore throat, hair loss, weight loss, swollen glands, headache, and muscle pains. |
3 | Can you live a normal life after syphilis? | Antibiotics can treat syphilis in the early stages. Syphilis doesn't cause long-term health problems if you receive treatment early. |
4 | What happens when you have syphilis? | Without treatment, syphilis can damage the heart, brain or other organs. It can become life-threatening. Early syphilis can be cured, sometimes with a single shot of medicine called penicillin. That's why it's key to get a health care checkup as soon as you notice any symptoms of syphilis. |
5 | Is syphilis a lifelong STD? | Syphilis is a highly contagious disease that is caused most often through sexualcontact. It is 100% curable if treated correctly with antibiotics. If your infection is left untreated, even if your symptoms go away, it can cause very serious, long-term health problems and even death. |
6 | Will syphilis stay with you forever? | However, that does not mean the infection has gone away—only antibiotics can cure syphilis. An antibiotic injection is usually enough to cure syphilis. However, untreated syphilis can progress to the fourth stage, which can be serious and even life-threatening. |
7 | What does syphilis look like on a man? | It can cause sores that may occur on or near the genitals, anus, rectum, mouth, or lips. It may also cause a rash and other symptoms like swollen lymph glands. Syphilis in people with penises can be diagnosed with a swab test, physical exam, or blood test. It can be treated successfully with antibiotics |
8 | How does a woman know if she has syphilis? | Signs vary in each stage. Primary Stage: The first sign of syphilis is often a small, round, firm sore. These appear at the place where it entered the body such as the vulva, vaginatongue, or lips. These signs may be inside thevagina. |
9 | What STDs are not curable? | Viruses such as HIV, genital herpes, human papillomavirus, hepatitis, and cytomegalovirus cause STDs/STIs that cannot be cured. People with an STI caused by a virus will be infected for life and will always be at risk of infecting their sexualpartners. |
10 | Can syphilis be transmitted through kissing? | Syphilis is more commonly transmitted through oral, anal or front hole sex but it can sometimes be transmitted via kissing. This is only possible when someone has visible sores (also known as chancres) in their mouth. Chancres are small sores, which are often painless and can go unnoticed within your mouth. |
11 | Does syphilis stay in your blood forever? | Shortly after infection occurs, the body produces syphilis antibodies that can be detected by a blood test. Even after full treatment, antibodies to syphilis remain in the blood and may be detectable for many years after the infection has gone. |
12 | Is syphilis contagious by touch? | Syphilis is transmitted through close skin-to-skin contact. Itis highly contagious when the syphilis sore (chancre) or rash is present. The incubation period for syphilis ranges from 10 days to 3 months. You can pick up syphilis through unprotected oral, vaginal or anal sex with a person who is infected. |
13 | Is syphilis 100% curable? | Take syphilis seriously and get tested and treated early if you are at risk or have symptoms. It can be cured through a simple treatment of penicillin. |
14 | What animal did syphilis come from? | However, there is also some evidence of treponemal disease in Europe prior to 1493 (when Columbus' crew returned), although this evidence is not as strong and is disputed by many. There is also evidence that syphilis originated in either cattle or sheep and made a zoonotic transmission to humans |
15 | What is one of the first signs of syphilis? | Symptoms of primary syphilis are: Small, painless open sore or ulcer (called a chancre) on the genitals, mouth, skin, or rectum that heals by itself in 3 to 6 weeks. Enlarged lymph nodes in the area of the sore. |
16 | Will 7 days of doxycycline cure syphilis? | Early syphilis (primary, secondary, and early non-primary non-secondary syphilis) can be treated with doxycycline 100mg po twice a day for 14 days. |
17 | Does syphilis itch? | It usually develops on the trunk of the body, the palms of the hands, and the soles of the feet. A syphilis rash is usually not itchy. It can develop alongside other symptoms, such as fatigue, unexplained weight loss, headaches, and a sore throat. |