Antinuclear antibodies $$$

Author:Prof. Dr. med. Peter Altmeyer

All authors of this article

Last updated on: 23.11.2022

Dieser Artikel auf Deutsch

Synonym(s)

ANA; Antibodies antinuclear

Requires free registration (medical professionals only)

Please login to access all articles, images, and functions.

Our content is available exclusively to medical professionals. If you have already registered, please login. If you haven't, you can register for free (medical professionals only).


Requires free registration (medical professionals only)

Please complete your registration to access all articles and images.

To gain access, you must complete your registration. You either haven't confirmed your e-mail address or we still need proof that you are a member of the medical profession.

Finish your registration now

DefinitionThis section has been translated automatically.

ANA are the antibodies (gamma globulins) important for diagnostics; they include all autoantibodies against nuclear antigens in the nucleus and cytoplasm. In contrast to the original definition, the term "ANA" also includes antibodies against cytoplasmic and mitochondrial target antigens. ANA include, for example, DNA, histones (H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4), DNA-histone complexes, ribonucleoproteins (U1-RNP, Sm, La (SS-B), Ro (SS-A), Jo-1 (histidyl-t-RNA transferase)), and non-histone proteins (centromere-AK, Scl-70, PM-1, Mi-2).

See also Autoantibodies.

Extractable antinuclear antibodies(ENA) are a diagnostically important subgroup.

General informationThis section has been translated automatically.

Detection by indirect immunofluorescence methods (considered the gold standard); HEp-2 cells form the substrate. The fluorescence pattern gives an indication of the specificity of the antibody. Nuclear, cytoplasmic and mitotic patterns are distinguished. Diagnosis is performed according to ICAP, an international standard (ICAP = International Consensus on Antinuclear Antibody Pattern), which distinguishes 20 discrete fluorescence patterns (ICAP code).

Furthermore, ELISA techniques as well as immunoblot procedures(Western blot) can be used.

Standard value: The standard value is positive from a titer of 1: 160 (ANA with low affinity is often detected in healthy people).

Pathologically elevated: Felty syndrome, systemic lupus erythematosus, autoimmune hepatitis, drug-induced discoid and subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, multiple non-inflammatory diseases, juvenile chronic arthritis, poly-/dermatomyositis.

OccurrenceThis section has been translated automatically.

In older people, positive findings without detectable disease (frequency varies according to literature. Up to 30% in people >60 years; up to 8% in people <60 years).

Authors

Last updated on: 23.11.2022