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This Article is From Apr 14, 2020

All You Need To Know About COVID-19 Tests, Hotspots Amid Surging Cases

The death toll due to coronavirus in the country rose to 339 while the number of cases soared to 10,363 on Tuesday, said the Union Health Ministry.

All You Need To Know About COVID-19 Tests, Hotspots Amid Surging Cases
Hotspots in many states have been converted into containment zones across country (File)
New Delhi:

As the world reels under the effects of the coronavirus pandemic, medical terminologies like rapid antibodies test, RT-PCR test, hotspots and containment zones have come into focus.

Doctors explain for the common man what these testing and containment terminologies mean.

In India, two kinds of diagnostic tests are being currently used -- RT-PCR test and rapid antibodies test - as per the global health norms.

A reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test is a laboratory technique combining reverse transcription of RNA into DNA that detects the virus while the antibody tests, which use blood, detect the body's response to the virus, experts said.

"In RT-PCR, it is tested if the virus is present or not. A sample is taken from the respiratory tract of a person, throat swab or a sample from the naseopharyngal region and then tested. The results take about 12-24 hours," said noted Delhi-based lung surgeon Arvind Kumar.

Mr Kumar, who works at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, said, RT-PCR tests take time and are a costly affair because of its elaborate kit.

"On the other hand, the rapid antibodies test are less expensive and the results can come in 20-30 minutes. It essentially tests if the antibodies in response to the coronavirus infection has been generated or not," he said.

These tests are generally used in hotspots where the infection is found concentrated in a given area. A hotspot is a zone from where a large number of COVID-19 cases are reported.

In Delhi, till Monday night the number of hotspots stood at 47, which have been made into containment zones and sealed.

"In rapid antibodies test, the result will be positive only if the antibodies have been generated. So, even if a person is infected but the antibodies are not generated, the result will be negative," Mr Kumar said.

In many cases, it has happened in the past that a person tested negative earlier but after a few days when he or she reached another country, and tested positive there.

This same person would have come out positive had the RT-PCR test been conducted, but the issue is feasibility of its use.

In government labs, the tests are free but at private laboratories, which use RT-PCR test the cost is Rs 4,500.

The Supreme Court on Monday modified its April 8 order that asked private labs to conduct free COVID-19 tests and said the benefit will be available only to "economically weaker sections" who are covered under a government scheme such as Ayushman Bharat.

The top court said it never intended to make testing free for those who can afford to pay.

It had on April 8 directed that private labs, which were allowed to charge Rs 4,500 for it, would not charge for the tests observing that they need to be philanthropic in the hour of national crisis.

A spokesperson of the Thyrocare labs, one of the laboratories authorised by the government to do testing, said, testing has to be done judiciously as there are less number of kits in India. A doctor's recommendation is required before the lab conducts a test, he said.

The death toll due to coronavirus in the country rose to 339 while the number of cases soared to 10,363 on Tuesday, said the Union Health Ministry.

Doctors at Delhi government hospitals said if either the naseopharyngal or the oral samples tests positive, that person is considered to be infected by coronavirus.

How well these tests work depends on several factors, including the time from the onset of illness, the concentration of virus in the specimen, the quality of the specimen collected from a person and how it is processed, and the precise formulation of the reagents in the test kits, experts said.

Additionally, false positive results -- that is, a test showing that a person is infected when they are not -- could occur if the antibodies on the test strip also recognise antigens of viruses other than COVID-19, such as from human coronaviruses that causes the common cold, they said.

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