Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology)

discountup to 50% off
Lab Tests
arrow
Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology)
discountup to 50% off

Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology), in Visit Clinic

Measures IgG antibodies to Echinococcus parasites to help detect or monitor hydatid infection in liver or lungs in Visit Clinic.

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

What is a Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) Test in Visit Clinic?

This blood test measures IgG antibodies made in response to Echinococcus parasites that cause hydatid disease. Antibodies indicate the immune system has encountered the parasite. Detecting them helps identify cystic infections, most commonly in the liver and sometimes in the lungs. The test is useful because hydatid cysts can grow without symptoms and later cause pain, infection, or organ pressure. Doctors use this test together with imaging such as ultrasound or CT. A positive result supports the diagnosis, and results can help monitor treatment or check for recurrence. False positives or negatives can occur, so results are interpreted with symptoms and scans.

Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) Test in Visit Clinic?

Echinococcus Antibody IgG (Hydatid serology) is often included in parasitic or infectious disease panels when hydatid disease is suspected. Doctors order it for unexplained liver or lung cysts, abdominal pain, coughing, or abnormal imaging findings. It helps diagnose cystic echinococcosis and monitor treatment response or recurrence. Abnormal results can reflect exposure to parasite eggs, travel to endemic areas, contact with infected animals, or cross-reacting infections; family or occupational exposure raises concern.

How to Book a Test ?

Search & Add Test

Search by test names and add it to your cart

step-image
arrow-right

Select a Lab

Choose your preferred labs from top trusted partners

step-image
arrow-right

Select Date & Slot

Select a convenient date and time for your test

step-image
arrow-right

Pay & Book

Make payment and get confirmation within 2 hours

step-image

Frequently asked questions

For any unanswered questions, reach out to our support team via email. We will assist you as soon as possible

What does Echinococcus IgG positive mean in Visit Clinic?plus

Echinococcus IgG positive indicates your immune system has made antibodies to Echinococcus tapeworms, suggesting a current or past infection (hydatid disease). Serology alone cannot reliably tell active from resolved infection and may cross‑react with other parasites. Positive results need clinical correlation and imaging (ultrasound/CT) plus specialist assessment; treatment (antiparasitic drugs or surgery) depends on cyst location, size, and symptoms.

What is the hydatid serology test for in Visit Clinic?plus

The hydatid serology test is a blood test that detects antibodies against Echinococcus parasites causing hydatid (echinococcal) cysts. It helps support imaging-based diagnosis, confirm exposure, monitor treatment response and detect relapse. Sensitivity varies by cyst location and stage (better for liver than lung); results can be false-negative or false-positive, so serology is interpreted alongside clinical assessment and imaging.

What is the best treatment for Echinococcus in Visit Clinic?plus

Best treatment depends on species and cyst location. For cystic echinococcosis, surgical removal or PAIR (puncture–aspiration–injection–reaspiration) combined with albendazole is standard; albendazole alone is used for small or inoperable cysts. For alveolar disease, radical surgery plus long-term albendazole is preferred; indefinite medical therapy if unresectable. Management should be individualized by specialists.

How do you test for Echinococcus in hydatid cysts in Visit Clinic?plus

Diagnosis combines imaging (ultrasound, CT, MRI) with serology and direct testing. Serologic assays—ELISA, indirect hemagglutination and confirmatory immunoblot—detect anti‑Echinococcus antibodies. Direct confirmation comes from microscopic identification of protoscoleces or hooklets in aspirated cyst fluid, PCR on cyst/tissue for parasite DNA, or histopathology after resection. Aspiration risks anaphylaxis and dissemination, so perform only under specialist protocols.

How do humans get infected with Echinococcus in Visit Clinic?plus

Humans become accidental intermediate hosts by ingesting microscopic Echinococcus eggs shed in the feces of infected canines (dogs, foxes). Infection occurs via contaminated hands, food, water, soil, or contact with infected animals or their offal; poor hygiene and occupational exposure (farmers, abattoir workers) increase risk. After ingestion, eggs hatch and larvae migrate to organs (commonly liver and lungs) forming hydatid cysts.

What is the difference between echinococcosis and hydatid disease in Visit Clinic?plus

Echinococcosis is the general term for infections by Echinococcus tapeworms. Hydatid disease (hydatidosis) specifically refers to the cystic form, usually caused by Echinococcus granulosus, where fluid-filled hydatid cysts develop mainly in liver and lungs. Another type, alveolar echinococcosis (E. multilocularis), is more invasive and tumor‑like; treatments and prognosis differ between forms.