Acon Five Panel Drug Tests Dip Card
(COC, THC, OPI, mAMP, PCP)
Product Information:
- Quantity: Box of 25 Kits
- Configurations: (COC, THC,
OPI, mAMP, PCP)
Test Features:
- On-site testing
- Saves time & money
- Simple dip and read procedure
- Room temperature storage
- Laboratory accurate
- Results in minutes
- 18 to 24 month shelf-life
The Five Panel Drug
Test is an on-site (rapid) urine test offering low cost and convenient
collection. The Five Panel Drug Test is widely used to test for Cocaine,
Marijuana, Opiates, Methamphetamine and Phencyclidine. The Five Panel Test is used by removing the
end cap and inserting the detection device into the collection cup.
Once the detection device is inserted, the tests will begin to run.
The test results will be visible in a few minutes and if no drugs are
found the corresponding panel will develop a red line below the Control
Line.
Acon Urine drug test
kits are the least expensive and most flexible (meaning it is possible
to test for many different drugs in different combinations) in testing
drugs. Results of an Acon urine drug test detect the presence or absence
of specific drugs in the urine. A positive urine test result does not
necessarily mean that the donor was under the influence of drugs at
the time of the test. Acon can be defined as a rapid, one step screening
test for the simultaneous, qualitative detection of multiple drugs and
drug metabolites in human urine.
Acon Drug Test Five
panel urine drug test is an immunoassay based on the principle of competitive
binding. Drugs which may be present in the urine specimen compete against
their respective drug conjugate for binding sites on their specific
antibody. During testing, a urine specimen migrates upward by capillary
action. A drug, if present in the urine specimen below its cut-off concentration,
will not saturate the binding sites of its specific antibody. The antibody
will then react with the drug-protein conjugate and a visible colored
line will show up in the test line region of the specific drug strip.
The presence of drug above the cut-off concentration will saturate all
the binding sites of the antibody. Therefore, the colored line will
not form in the test line region.
A drug-positive urine
specimen will not generate a colored line in the specific test line
region of the strip because of drug competition, while a drug-negative
urine specimen will generate a line in the test line region because
of the absence of drug competition. To serve as a procedural control,
a colored line will always appear at the control line region, indicating
that proper volume of specimen has been added and membrane wicking has
occurred.