tech.lgbt is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
We welcome all marginalized identities. This Mastodon instance is generally for folks who are LGBTQIA+ and Allies with an interest in tech work, academics, or technology in general.

Server stats:

2.9K
active users

Public
Public

@taminaminam from my understanding, there are 2 quantitative hormone assays done. 1 of them is mass spectrometry, which just involves a really fancy expensive machine. The other is an enzyme linked immunoabsorbant assay (ELISA), which is a super common biochemical tool. Generally, ELISAs are run on 96 well plates, and results are either determined by how brightly colored the reaction ends up being, or by how fluorescent. Sadly, both kinds of assay kits are in the $200-700 range

Quiet public

@madasrabbits while getting myself a mass spectrometer and actually understanding the readings probably wouldn't be feasible, that'd just be really fucking cool

@madasrabbits the thing you're referring to in your other reply is an ELISA then if I'm assuming right?

Quiet public

@taminaminam yeah, Elisa kits are in the 200-700 USD range, plus they require some equipment which is also not too accessible, sadly