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Your endomysial antibody test is negative. The EMA test is highly specific (>99%) for celiac disease, so a negative result makes active celiac disease very unlikely.
Anti-endomysial antibodies are not detected. This is the normal finding and helps rule out celiac disease.
No action needed.
Anti-EMA IgA: negative (<1:10) — no endomysial antibodiesNo endomysial antibodies were detected. This helps exclude celiac disease with high confidence.
No action needed.
Anti-EMA IgA: negativeYour endomysial antibody test is negative. The EMA test is highly specific (>99%) for celiac disease, so a negative result makes active celiac disease very unlikely.
No action needed. Reassuring result.
Anti-EMA IgA: negative (<1:10) — within normal limitsEMA is negative, which is the ideal result. No celiac-specific autoimmune activity detected.
No action needed.
Anti-EMA IgA: negative — optimal resultA weakly positive EMA at low titer may indicate early celiac disease or can occasionally be a false positive. Correlation with tTG-IgA levels and clinical symptoms is essential.
Discuss with your doctor. Repeat testing and correlation with tTG-IgA and biopsy may be recommended.
Anti-EMA IgA: weakly positive at low titerA positive EMA test is highly specific for celiac disease. Combined with a positive tTG-IgA, this provides strong serological evidence for the diagnosis. The EMA test targets endomysium — connective tissue surrounding smooth muscle.
See a gastroenterologist. Endoscopy with duodenal biopsy is recommended to grade intestinal damage before committing to lifelong gluten-free diet.
Anti-EMA IgA: positive — celiac disease confirmedA strongly positive EMA at high titer indicates active celiac disease with significant ongoing autoimmune damage to the small intestine. This almost always correlates with significant villous atrophy.
Seek gastroenterology consultation promptly. Endoscopy with biopsy and initiation of strict gluten-free diet are needed. Monitor for nutritional deficiencies.
Anti-EMA IgA: strongly positive at high titerUpload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.