Sceening test for the diagnosis of complement deficiency. CH50" (CH stands for "hemolytic complement"; the number 50 results from the serum dilution at which 50% hemolysis has occurred) is a laboratory parameter used to determine the activity of the complement system. The CH50 test maps the functional activities of the classical (CH50) activation pathway (see also the AP50 test procedure which maps the functions of the alternative activation pathway.
Patient serum provides the complement source and sheep erythrocytes are the indicator system. Human serum serves as the control (normal), and inactivated patient serum (inactivation at 56 C for 30 min) serves as the blank.
The CH50 test and the (similarly designed) AP50 test are suitable for screening. Both tell approximately the same amount about the terminal lytic portion C5b-9 of the complement cascade. If the CH50 is pathological and the AP50 is normal, a component of classical activation (C1, C4, C2) is decreased or absent. If AP50 is pathological and CH50 is normal, factors of alternative activation (D, B, P) are decreased or absent.