Gastrointestinal Pathogen and Inflammation Rapid Tests
Acute gastroenteritis looks the same whether it's viral, bacterial, or parasitic — until the treatment decision. Campylobacter needs antibiotics. Norovirus doesn't. C. difficile needs a specific antibiotic, and the wrong one makes it worse. A lateral flow result in 10–15 minutes from a stool sample changes what you do next.
This collection covers 23 fecal and stool antigen rapid tests across four categories, organized by what's being detected.
Bacterial pathogens Salmonella (general and S. typhi-specific), Shigella (general and S. dysenteriae-specific), Campylobacter, E. coli, and Clostridium difficile Toxin A+B — covering the most common bacterial causes of acute and healthcare-associated gastroenteritis. C. diff Toxin A+B simultaneous detection in a single strip supports the combined toxin testing recommended in C. difficile infection diagnosis guidelines.
Viral pathogens Norovirus, Rotavirus, Astrovirus, Enterovirus, and Adenovirus (intestinal) strips. Rotavirus+Adenovirus combination strip for pediatric acute gastroenteritis, where co-infection and differential diagnosis from a single test is the priority. Fecal sample input for all.
Parasitic pathogens Cryptosporidium, Giardia, and a Crypto+Giardia dual strip for simultaneous detection — relevant for waterborne outbreak investigation, returning travelers, and immunocompromised patients where both parasites are on the differential.
Helicobacter pylori H. pylori stool antigen test in cassette format for non-invasive detection and post-treatment follow-up — the recommended first-line non-invasive test for active H. pylori infection.
Intestinal inflammation markers Calprotectin, Lactoferrin, Lactoferrin+Calprotectin (combo), FOB (fecal occult blood), and FOB+Transferrin — for IBD monitoring, colorectal cancer screening, and differentiation of inflammatory from functional GI disorders.
No instruments required. Results in minutes. Ships worldwide.























