Infectious Mononucleosis

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Infectious Mononucleosis
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Infectious Mononucleosis, in Visit Clinic

Detects antibodies and blood changes that indicate an Epstein-Barr virus infection causing mono symptoms like sore throat in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Blood
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
6
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Infectious Mononucleosis Test in Visit Clinic?

The Infectious Mononucleosis test looks for signs that your immune system is fighting an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. It commonly measures antibodies made against EBV and checks blood cell patterns that change with the illness. The test helps confirm the cause of fever, sore throat, swollen glands, and extreme tiredness. Doctors use it to distinguish mono from strep throat and other viral infections. It also helps assess complications like liver inflammation or low platelet counts. Results guide treatment, activity advice (for example avoiding contact sports if the spleen is enlarged), and further testing when symptoms are severe or prolonged.

Infectious Mononucleosis Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Infectious Mononucleosis Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Infectious Mononucleosis test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Monospot (heterophile antibody)
  • EBV VCA IgM
  • EBV VCA IgG
  • EBV EBNA IgG
  • CBC with differential
  • Liver function tests

Why Take a Infectious Mononucleosis Test in Visit Clinic?

Infectious Mononucleosis is often ordered as a panel including a Monospot test, EBV-specific antibodies, a CBC, and liver tests. Doctors request it when patients have fever, sore throat, swollen lymph nodes, or severe fatigue to confirm mono and rule out other causes. Abnormal results occur with recent EBV infection, other viral infections, or liver involvement and sometimes with immune disorders or medications. Testing may be more important if household contacts are ill, or if there is a history of immune problems in the family.

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Frequently asked questions

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What causes infectious mononucleosis in Visit Clinic?plus

Infectious mononucleosis is most commonly caused by the Epstein–Barr virus (EBV), which spreads primarily through saliva—kissing, sharing utensils, or drinks. Less commonly, cytomegalovirus and other viruses cause a similar illness. EBV infects B cells and throat cells, then spreads via lymphocytes; close contact and adolescence/young adulthood increase transmission risk, and infections are often asymptomatic in children.

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

The best treatment for infectious mononucleosis is supportive: rest, plenty of fluids, throat soothing measures, and pain/fever relief with acetaminophen or NSAIDs. Corticosteroids are used only for severe throat swelling or airway compromise. Antibiotics aren’t helpful unless there’s a bacterial infection (amoxicillin often causes a rash in mono). Avoid contact sports for at least 3–4 weeks due to spleen rupture risk.

What is the hallmark of infectious mononucleosis in Visit Clinic?plus

The hallmark of infectious mononucleosis is marked fatigue with sore throat and tender posterior cervical lymphadenopathy, often accompanied by fever, pharyngitis, and splenomegaly. Laboratory features include atypical (reactive) lymphocytosis and positive heterophile (Monospot) antibodies, which help confirm Epstein–Barr virus–related mononucleosis. Symptoms typically develop 4–6 weeks after exposure and can last several weeks to months.

How long is someone contagious with mono in Visit Clinic?plus

Mononucleosis (EBV) spreads through saliva. People are most contagious during the acute symptomatic phase—typically two to four weeks—but viral shedding can continue for several months after recovery and intermittently for life. Incubation is usually four to six weeks. To reduce spread, avoid kissing, sharing utensils, and close saliva exposure while symptomatic and for several weeks afterward; immunocompromised people may shed longer.

What are the first signs of mono in Visit Clinic?plus

Early signs of mono often include extreme fatigue, a sore throat (sometimes with white patches), fever, and tender, swollen lymph nodes in the neck. Other initial symptoms can be headache, loss of appetite, muscle aches and swollen tonsils; some people also develop a skin rash. Symptoms usually build gradually over days to weeks.

Is infectious mononucleosis serious in Visit Clinic?plus

Infectious mononucleosis (mono), usually caused by Epstein–Barr virus, is typically mild and self-limiting with fever, sore throat, fatigue and swollen lymph nodes. Most recover with rest, fluids and symptom relief. Serious complications are uncommon but can include enlarged spleen with risk of rupture, airway obstruction, liver inflammation, or neurological problems—seek urgent care for severe breathing, abdominal pain, jaundice or very high fever.