Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid)

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Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid)
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Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid), in Visit Clinic

Detects mycobacterial DNA in pleural fluid to quickly identify tuberculosis or related infections in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
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 Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) Test in Visit Clinic?

This PCR test looks for genetic material (DNA) from mycobacteria in pleural fluid. It measures whether mycobacterial organisms are present in the fluid around the lungs. That matters because some mycobacteria cause pleural infections and can lead to prolonged illness. The test helps detect tuberculosis and other nontuberculous mycobacterial infections. Results guide treatment decisions and infection control. Doctors use it when imaging, symptoms, or fluid analysis suggest an infection. It is faster than culture and helps start targeted therapy sooner. A negative result does not always rule out infection, so clinicians often use PCR along with cultures, chest imaging, and clinical assessment.

Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) Test in Visit Clinic?

Mycobacterium Complex - PCR (Pleural Fluid) is often part of a tuberculosis or mycobacterial testing panel used when a pleural effusion is unexplained. Doctors order it for symptoms like persistent cough, chest pain, fever, or breathlessness and when imaging shows fluid around the lungs. It helps diagnose tuberculosis and other mycobacterial infections. Abnormal results usually reflect infection but can be affected by contamination or recent antibiotics. Family exposure to TB or weakened immunity may make testing more urgent.

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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

Can pleural fluid be PCR for TB in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes. Nucleic acid amplification tests (PCR/Xpert) can detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis in pleural fluid and rapidly identify rifampicin resistance, but sensitivity is variable and generally lower than sputum, pleural biopsy, or culture. A negative PCR does not exclude tuberculous pleural effusion; pleural biopsy with histology and mycobacterial culture is often recommended for definitive diagnosis.

What is Mycobacterium tuberculosis in pleural fluid in Visit Clinic?plus

Mycobacterium tuberculosis in pleural fluid means the TB bacterium is present in the pleural space, causing a tuberculous pleural effusion. Detection by microscopy, culture or PCR confirms pleural TB, although these tests can be insensitive. Pleural fluid is typically exudative with high protein, lymphocyte predominance and often elevated ADA. Identification directs anti-tubercular therapy and may prompt pleural biopsy.

What is MTB PCR positive in Visit Clinic?plus

MTB PCR positive means polymerase chain reaction detected DNA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the tested specimen. It suggests tuberculosis infection and is a rapid, sensitive diagnostic tool, but may detect nonviable bacilli. Results require clinical correlation and usually confirmation with culture and drug‑susceptibility testing. Clinicians combine PCR with symptoms, imaging, and other microbiology to decide diagnosis and treatment.

What happens if TB PCR is positive in Visit Clinic?plus

If TB PCR is positive, it indicates Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA is present and suggests active infection but must be interpreted with clinical assessment. Further steps include chest imaging, sputum smear and culture with drug‑susceptibility testing (to confirm viability and resistance), HIV testing, contact tracing and public‑health notification. Treatment with standard anti‑TB therapy should be started promptly per local guidelines; isolation may be needed if pulmonary TB is contagious.

What is the PCR test for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Visit Clinic?plus

The PCR test for Mycobacterium tuberculosis amplifies and detects MTB complex DNA in clinical specimens (sputum, BAL, tissue), providing rapid, sensitive and specific diagnosis within hours. It improves detection when microscopy is negative and some platforms (e.g., Xpert) can also identify rifampicin resistance. PCR detects DNA but cannot reliably distinguish live from dead organisms; culture remains the gold standard for viability and full drug‑susceptibility testing.

What is the 3 test rule for pleural fluid in Visit Clinic?plus

The "three‑test rule" for pleural fluid uses pH, glucose and LDH to detect complicated parapneumonic effusion/empyema. Drainage is suggested if pleural fluid pH is <7.20, glucose <60 mg/dL (≈3.3 mmol/L), or there is markedly elevated LDH (or pus/positive culture). These abnormalities indicate significant inflammation and help decide chest‑tube drainage versus conservative management.