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PCR Polymerase chain reaction. This test is probably the most single useful test to assess the presence or absence of the hepatitis C virus itself in the blood and other body tissue. It can detect minute traces of the HCV in any given medium and works by taking a sample of blood and amplifying the nucleic acid associated with the virus many millions of times. This is the chain reaction, a copying process. It brings the nucleic acid up to detectable levels. ...
Ãâó: www.texasliver.org/glossary.html
PCR A method for amplifying a DNA base sequence using a heat- stable polymerase and two 20- base primers, one complementary to the (+)- strand at one end of the sequence to be amplified and the other complementary to the (- )- strand at the other end. ...
Ãâó: www.bioinformatics.buffalo.edu/current_buffalo/glo...
PCR A method for exponentially increasing the number of copies of a specific DNA sequence. The use of PCR enables the genetic analysis of biological samples containing only tiny amounts of DNA.
Ãâó: www.phgu.org.uk/info_database/glossary.html
PCR A technique commonly used in DNA testing and research to analyze minute quantities of genomic DNA by amplification (making millions of copies) of a specific gene or region.
Ãâó: www.infigen.com/sci_gloss.html
PCR A process allowing the multiplication and detection of minute traces of DNA.
Ãâó: www.nccr-oncology.ch/en/glossary/glossary.htm
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