BioStone > Products & Services > Animal Disease Diagnostic Kits > Equine Testing > ELISA Equine Testing > Equine Viral Arteritis (EVA) Ab
AsurDx™ Equine Viral Arteritis (EVA) Antibody Test
The AsurDxTM Equine Viral Arteritis (EVA) Antibody Test Kit is designed for the detection of IgG antibodies specific to Equine arteritis virus. EVA is a disease of horses caused by a virus of the species Equine arteritis virus (Alphaarterivirus equid), an RNA virus. Equine arteritis virus is found in horse populations worldwide. The majority of naturally acquired infections with EVA are subclinical. Clinical signs of EVA can vary in range and severity but often cause fever, depression, anorexia, edema, conjunctivitis, urticaria/hives, and abortion.

Feature
- Detects Equine Viral Arteritis serogroup-specific IgG antibodies in horse serum/plasma samples;
- Procedures last less than 75 minutes;
- Provides a simple, rapid, sensitive and cost-effective enzyme-based immunoassay (ELISA) screening method
*Availability/Distribution: Product is designed and developed by BioStone US Texas headquarter and manufactured/assembled by BioStone oversea subsidiaries or partners. Currently, the product is only available outside of the USA. Regulatory requirements vary by oversea countries; the product may not be available in your geographic area.
Specification
Method | Indirect ELISA |
Coated Antigen | EVA antigen-coated Plate |
Incubation Time | 45 minutes |
Storage | At least 12 months |
Specificity | EVA serogroup-specific IgG antibodies in horse serum/plasma |
Order Information
Catalog Number | 10109-02 | 10109-05 |
Plates | 2 plates | 5 plates |
Reactions | 192 | 480 |
Plate Format | 12 X 8-well strips | 12 X 8-well strips |
About Disease
The AsurDxTM Equine Viral Arteritis (EVA) Antibody Test Kit is designed for the detection of IgG antibodies specific to Equine arteritis virus. EVA is a disease of horses caused by a virus of the species Equine arteritis virus (Alphaarterivirus equid), an RNA virus. The Bucyrus strain is the most prevalent serotype of the virus, although variants exist. Equine arteritis virus is found in horse populations worldwide. The majority of naturally acquired infections with EVA are subclinical. Clinical signs of EVA can vary in range and severity but often cause fever, depression, anorexia, edema, conjunctivitis, urticaria/hives, and abortion.