Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM

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Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM
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Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM, in Visit Clinic

Detects early (IgM) antibodies to hepatitis C virus to help identify recent infection and prompt follow-up 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 Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM Test in Visit Clinic?

This test looks for IgM antibodies made by your immune system after recent hepatitis C virus exposure. IgM antibodies usually appear early in an infection. Finding them suggests a recent or acute hepatitis C infection. The test helps identify new infections so doctors can act quickly. It is often used with other tests, especially an HCV RNA test, to confirm whether the virus is actually present. Results guide treatment decisions and infection control. Doctors use it when someone has symptoms, recent risk exposures, or when screening at-risk groups. False positives and negatives can occur, so follow-up testing is important.

Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM Test in Visit Clinic?

Hepatitis C Virus( hcv antibody ) -IgM is commonly included in acute viral hepatitis or hepatitis C screening panels. Doctors order it when patients have jaundice, dark urine, unexplained fatigue, abdominal pain, or recent risk exposures such as shared needles or blood transfusion. It helps detect recent infection and prompts confirmatory HCV RNA testing. Abnormal results can reflect recent infection, past exposure, or rare false positives, and family or household exposure may make testing more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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

Is HCV a serious disease in Visit Clinic?plus

Hepatitis C (HCV) can be serious. Many infections become chronic, often silently damaging the liver over years and leading to cirrhosis, liver failure or liver cancer. It also causes extra‑hepatic problems like fatigue and joint pain. Modern direct‑acting antivirals cure most cases if diagnosed and treated early, preventing long‑term complications, so testing and timely treatment are important.

What is the normal range for HCV antibody in Visit Clinic?plus

The normal (negative) result for an HCV antibody test is "non‑reactive" — commonly reported as a signal‑to‑cutoff (S/CO) index below 1.0. A reactive/positive antibody (S/CO ≥1.0) does not distinguish past from current infection and requires confirmatory HCV RNA testing to detect active virus. Different assays and labs may use slightly different cutoffs, so confirm with your clinician.

What happens if HCV is positive in Visit Clinic?plus

If an HCV test is positive, you’ll usually get a confirmatory HCV RNA (PCR) test to see if the virus is active. Active infection prompts evaluation of liver health and fibrosis; most people can be cured with direct-acting antiviral treatment. Without treatment, chronic HCV can cause cirrhosis, liver failure, or liver cancer. You’ll also receive advice on prevention and vaccinations.

How does a person get HCV in Visit Clinic?plus

Hepatitis C spreads when infected blood enters another person’s bloodstream. Common routes are sharing needles, syringes or other injecting equipment, unsterile medical/dental procedures, and needlestick injuries. Transmission also occurs from infected mothers to babies during childbirth and, less commonly, through sexual contact (higher risk with HIV or multiple partners). It’s not spread by casual contact, hugging, coughing, food or water.

Who is most at risk for HCV in Visit Clinic?plus

People at highest risk for hepatitis C include current or former injection drug users who share needles, recipients of blood transfusions or organ transplants before screening began (around 1992), long-term hemodialysis patients, and people with occupational needle-stick exposures. Also higher risk are people with HIV, those incarcerated, people who had tattoos or piercings with unsterile equipment, and babies born to infected mothers.

Is HCV negative good or bad in Visit Clinic?plus

"HCV negative" is generally good — it means no hepatitis C infection was detected. An antibody-negative result suggests no prior exposure; an RNA-negative result means no active infection. However, recent exposures can produce false negatives during the window period, so repeat testing as recommended (typically 1–3 months). Discuss results and next steps with your healthcare provider.