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This website is intended to assist with patient education and should not be used as a diagnostic, treatment or prescription service, forum or platform. Always consult your own healthcare practitioner for a more personalised and detailed opinion
To help diagnose the cause of hemolytic anemia as caused by autoimmune disease or induced by drugs; to investigate a blood transfusion reaction; to diagnose hemolytic disease of the newborn
When your healthcare provider wants to find out the cause of your hemolytic anemia; when you have had a blood transfusion recently and are experiencing symptoms of a transfusion reaction; or when a newborn shows signs of hemolytic disease of the newborn
A blood sample drawn from a vein in your arm
None
The direct antiglobulin test (DAT) looks for antibodies attached to red blood cells (RBCs) circulating in the bloodstream. The test may help to detect or identify conditions in which antibodies become attached to RBCs, causing them to break apart (hemolyze).
RBCs have structures on their surfaces called antigens. Each person has their own individual set of RBC antigens, determined by inheritance from their parents. The major antigens or surface identifiers on human RBCs are the O, A, and B antigens, and a person's blood is grouped into an A, B, AB, or O blood type according to the presence or absence of these antigens. Another important surface antigen is the D antigen in the Rh blood group system. If it is present on someone's red blood cells, that person's blood type is Rh+ (positive); if it is absent, the blood is type Rh- (negative). (For more on these antigens, see the article on Blood Typing.) In addition, there are many other types of RBC antigens that make up lesser known but still clinically significant blood groups, such as Kell, Duffy, and Kidd.
There are a few reasons why antibodies may become attached to antigens on RBCs:
A mother will be screened for antibodies during pregnancy and again at delivery. A DAT performed on the blood of a baby born to an at-risk mother will determine if its mother's antibodies have attached to the baby's RBCs.
If someone receives a blood transfusion, their body may also recognize other RBC antigens that it does not have, such as those from other blood groups (such as the Kell or Kidd blood groups), as foreign. The recipient may produce antibodies and they may become attached to these foreign antigens on the donor RBCs circulating in the bloodstream. People who have many transfusions are more likely to make antibodies to RBCs because they are exposed to more foreign RBC antigens. If someone shows symptoms of a reaction after transfusion, a DAT will be performed to determine if those antibodies have attached to the transfused donor RBCs.
A blood sample is obtained by inserting a needle into a vein in the arm.
No test preparation is needed.