Coombs Test - Indirect

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Coombs Test - Indirect
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Coombs Test - Indirect, in Visit Clinic

Detects antibodies in the blood that can attack red blood cells, helping prevent hemolytic reactions and anemia in Visit Clinic.

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SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
25 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Coombs Test - Indirect Test in Visit Clinic?

The indirect Coombs test measures antibodies circulating in the blood that can bind to red blood cells. These antibodies are not attached to cells yet but can cause red blood cells to be destroyed if they do bind. The test is important because antibody‑mediated red cell destruction can cause hemolytic anemia, jaundice, and problems during pregnancy. It helps detect risks for transfusion reactions and hemolytic disease of the newborn. Doctors use it to screen blood before transfusion, to check pregnant women for harmful antibodies, and to investigate unexplained anemia or jaundice. Results guide safe blood matching and decisions about monitoring or treatment.

Coombs Test - Indirect Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Coombs Test - Indirect Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Coombs Test - Indirect test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Coombs Test - Indirect Test in Visit Clinic?

Coombs Test - Indirect is commonly part of pre‑transfusion testing and prenatal antibody screening panels. Doctors may order it for unexplained anemia, jaundice, or after a transfusion reaction. It helps diagnose autoimmune hemolytic anemia, detect antibodies that can harm a fetus, and guide safe blood matching. Abnormal results arise from autoimmune disease, certain drugs, prior transfusions, or pregnancy. Family history of hemolytic disease or autoimmune disorders may make testing important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does the indirect Coombs test check for in Visit Clinic?plus

The indirect Coombs test (indirect antiglobulin test) detects free antibodies in a person’s serum that can bind red blood cells. It’s used for prenatal screening to find maternal alloantibodies that could cause hemolytic disease of the newborn, and for pre‑transfusion compatibility testing to identify unexpected antibodies that might react with donor red blood cells.

When is indirect Coombs done in Visit Clinic?plus

An indirect Coombs test is done to screen for free circulating red‑cell antibodies: routinely in pregnancy (early and around 28 weeks, and when the mother is Rh‑negative) to detect alloantibodies that can cause hemolytic disease of the fetus/newborn; before blood transfusion as part of pre‑transfusion antibody screening and crossmatching; and when investigating suspected hemolytic transfusion reactions or unexplained hemolytic anemia.

What if an indirect Coombs test is negative in Visit Clinic?plus

If an indirect Coombs test is negative, no free red‑cell antibodies are detected in the blood. That indicates a low immediate risk of immune‑mediated hemolysis for transfusion or the fetus/newborn. Routine care continues, but repeat antibody screening is recommended later in pregnancy or after transfusion/exposure because antibodies can develop later or be below initial detection thresholds.

What if a direct Coombs test is positive in Visit Clinic?plus

A positive direct Coombs (direct antiglobulin) test means antibodies or complement are bound to the patient’s red blood cells, indicating immune-mediated hemolysis. It triggers evaluation for causes—autoimmune disease, drugs, transfusion reaction, or hemolytic disease of the newborn—and labs (bilirubin, LDH, haptoglobin, smear). Treatment targets the cause and may include stopping offending drugs, corticosteroids or IVIG, specialist referral, and transfusion if needed.

What is the normal range for Coombs test in Visit Clinic?plus

The normal Coombs (direct antiglobulin) test result is negative—no antibody or complement bound to red blood cells. Some labs report a 0 to 4+ grading; 0 (negative) is normal. Any positive result (1+ to 4+) or a positive indirect Coombs indicates antibodies are present and requires further evaluation for immune‑mediated hemolysis, transfusion compatibility, or antibody screening.

Which sample is required for an indirect Coombs test in Visit Clinic?plus

The indirect Coombs (indirect antiglobulin) test requires the patient's serum — blood allowed to clot and centrifuged to obtain serum — which contains circulating antibodies that may react with red‑cell antigens. That serum is incubated with reagent red cells to detect allo‑ or autoantibodies, commonly used for prenatal antibody screening and pre‑transfusion compatibility testing.