Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid)

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Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid)
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Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid), in Visit Clinic

Separates and identifies proteins in pleural fluid to find infections, inflammation, cancer, or abnormal antibodies 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 Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) Test in Visit Clinic?

Protein electrophoresis of pleural fluid measures the types and amounts of proteins in fluid collected from around the lungs. It separates albumin and different globulin groups and can detect a single abnormal (monoclonal) protein band. These proteins reflect inflammation, infection, immune activity, or cancer in the chest. Doctors use the result to help tell if an effusion is caused by infection, malignancy, autoimmune disease, or a blood cell disorder. It is often used along with fluid cell counts, cultures, and imaging. Comparing pleural fluid with blood proteins helps decide whether the fluid is produced locally or reflects a systemic problem. Results guide further testing and treatment.

Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) Test in Visit Clinic?

Protein Electrophoresis (Pleural Fluid) is usually part of pleural fluid analysis or an effusion workup and helps find the cause of unexplained fluid around the lungs. Doctors may order it when you have breathlessness, chest pain, cough, or persistent fluid on chest imaging. It can detect malignancy, infections, tuberculosis, autoimmune disease, or plasma cell disorders. Abnormal results arise from cancer, infection, inflammation, immune disease, or systemic protein disorders and sometimes from medications. A family history of blood cancers or plasma cell disorders can make this test more relevant.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does protein in pleural fluid indicate in Visit Clinic?plus

Protein in pleural fluid helps classify an effusion as transudate or exudate. Elevated pleural protein (often assessed with the pleural/serum protein ratio and Light’s criteria) suggests exudative causes such as infection, malignancy, pulmonary embolism, or inflammatory disease due to increased capillary permeability or lymphatic obstruction. Low protein favors transudative causes like heart failure, cirrhosis, or nephrotic syndrome.

What does protein electrophoresis indicate in Visit Clinic?plus

Protein electrophoresis separates serum proteins into albumin and globulin fractions to reveal abnormal patterns. It detects monoclonal spikes (suggesting multiple myeloma or other plasma-cell disorders), polyclonal increases (inflammation or chronic infection), low immunoglobulins (immunodeficiency), and changes seen with liver disease or nephrotic syndrome. It helps diagnose conditions and monitor disease progression and treatment response.

What is the protein level in pleural fluid in TB patients in Visit Clinic?plus

Pleural fluid in tuberculous effusion is typically exudative, with total protein usually >3.0 g/dL (commonly 3–5 g/dL) and a pleural fluid/serum protein ratio >0.5. These values reflect increased capillary permeability and help distinguish TB effusions from transudates. Clinical interpretation should use Light’s criteria alongside cell counts and ADA for accurate diagnosis.

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

Yes—nucleic acid amplification tests (PCR/NAAT, e.g., Xpert) can be performed on pleural fluid to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis and rifampicin resistance. Sensitivity is lower than sputum or pleural biopsy/culture, so a negative PCR does not exclude tuberculous pleural effusion. Diagnostic yield improves by combining PCR with pleural fluid ADA, microscopy/culture, and thoracoscopic or image-guided pleural biopsy.

How to know if pleural fluid is malignant in Visit Clinic?plus

Malignant pleural effusion is suggested by unilateral, recurrent, often blood‑tinged effusions; fluid analyses show an exudate with high LDH, low glucose and low pH. Definitive diagnosis requires identification of malignant cells on pleural fluid cytology or tissue obtained by image‑guided biopsy or thoracoscopy. If cytology is negative but clinical suspicion persists, pleural biopsy and imaging (CT/PET) help confirm malignancy.

Can pleural fluid detect TB in Visit Clinic?plus

Pleural fluid can help detect tuberculous pleuritis, but direct detection is often limited: acid‑fast smears are insensitive, cultures improve yield but take weeks, and nucleic acid amplification tests increase sensitivity. High pleural fluid adenosine deaminase or interferon‑gamma strongly suggests TB. Pleural biopsy for histology and culture gives the highest diagnostic yield; combined tests and clinical context guide diagnosis.