- Testing for(target) is different than PCR targets to detect virus
- Antigen testing helps you proactively protect others
- And a form of others working to protecting you — them figuring out if they can transmit virus to you- Surveillance
- Rapid and economical because no lab equipment is necessary — at your workplace
- Ideal for more regular testing that also increases sensitivity
First, let’s define a key term: an antigen. It’s the part of an infectious agent that your body recognizes to trigger an immune response, so this can be something like a protein on the outside of a virus.
What a rapid antigen test does is identify antigens in a human sample by flowing that sample over a set of molecules that serve as probes because they can bind to the antigen of interest–if it’s in the sample.
Many rapid antigen tests are up to 95% specific
This usually means that the infectious agent has to be exactly that–infectious, because it needs to be viable enough for whole antigen to be present. This is in contrast to PCR which is detecting the genetic material of an infectious agent like a virus in a sample, because the RNA of a virus (like SARS-CoV-2!) can hang around in a sample for longer than it actually is able to infect a host, simply because of how RNA decays in contrast to something like a protein that would be the antigen on the outside of such a virus.
As for the rapid piece, these tests are relatively quick (usually under 30 minutes) because all the molecular pieces needed for analysis are in the test device itself, and there’s no need for sample processing or temperature control or changes to drive a chemical reaction, for example. By design, if there is antigen in the sample to bind to the “probe” molecules, a simple internal chemical reaction that is already set up and ready to go then displays colors in the form of easy-to-read lines for a quick result!
Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash