Why Hepatitis B e Antibody should be greater than 1

Hepatitis B e antibody is one of the five tests for Hepatitis B. When the quantitative test for Hepatitis B is performed by chemiluminescence, the result of Hepatitis B e antibody is greater than 1, which means that the result is within the normal range, i.e. e antibody is negative. If the hepatitis B e antibody is negative for hepatitis B virus, it depends on the results of the other four tests in the Hepatitis B 5 test. Hepatitis B e-negative and negative results for the other four tests mean that you do not have the hepatitis B virus and have not been vaccinated against it. Hepatitis B e antibody negative, surface antibody positive, also not carrying the hepatitis B virus, is a protective antibody produced by the hepatitis B vaccination in normal people. Hepatitis B e antibody negative, Hepatitis B surface antigen positive, Hepatitis B e antigen positive and Hepatitis B core antibody positive, the result then indicates a triple positive, which represents Hepatitis B virus infection, and the Hepatitis B virus replicates in large quantities in the body, making it highly contagious. Therefore, the normal value of Hepatitis B e antibody must be greater than 1 when quantifying Hepatitis B 5 by chemiluminescence.