Section Editor: Rodney E. Rohde PhD
June 3, 2026
Infectious mononucleosis, usually called mono, is an illness most often caused by the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). EBV is a very common virus, and most people are infected by it at some point in life, often without ever knowing. When it does cause illness, mono is most common in teenagers and young adults, with symptoms such as extreme tiredness, sore throat, fever, and swollen glands. Testing for mono usually involves a quick screening test and, in some cases, more specific EBV antibody tests.
This article explains the tests used to diagnose mono, what the wording on your report means, and how the EBV antibody results show whether an infection is recent or in the past, so you can better understand a report you have received.
Mono is most often caused by EBV, which spreads through saliva, one reason it is sometimes called the “kissing disease.” After an EBV infection, the virus stays in the body for life, and in many people, especially young children, it causes no symptoms at all. A few other infections, including one caused by a virus called cytomegalovirus (CMV), can cause a very similar illness, so testing helps confirm whether EBV is the cause.
The quick screening test for mono is the Monospot test, which detects heterophile antibodies. Antibodies are proteins that the immune system makes in response to an infection, and heterophile antibodies are a particular group that the body produces during an EBV mono infection, even though they are not specifically directed against EBV. The result is reported as positive or negative.
The monospot is fast and useful, but it has limits that are worth knowing:
When more detail is needed, the laboratory tests for antibodies specific to EBV. The three most common are described below. Their timing is what makes them useful, as they appear and disappear at different points during an infection. (IgM and IgG antibodies are explained in a separate article.)
Reading EBV antibody levels as a group shows where you are in an infection. The combinations below cover the most common patterns.
Mono often produces changes on a complete blood count (CBC), a common blood test that counts the different types of blood cells. Your report may mention a high number of lymphocytes (a type of white blood cell) and may describe some of them as atypical or reactive lymphocytes. This wording sounds alarming, but it simply means the cells have changed their appearance as they respond to the virus. In the setting of mono, this is an expected finding and is not a sign of a blood cancer such as leukemia.
Mono is usually diagnosed from a combination of your symptoms and your test results, and those results inform the decisions you and your healthcare team make together rather than dictating them on their own.
There is no specific antiviral medicine that cures mono. Care focuses on rest, fluids, and easing symptoms while the body clears the infection on its own. Most people recover fully, although tiredness can last for several weeks. Because the spleen, an organ in the upper left part of the abdomen, can become enlarged during mono, doctors often advise avoiding contact sports and heavy lifting for a period of time to lower the small risk of injuring it; follow your own doctor’s advice about when it is safe to return to your usual activities. After the infection, EBV stays in the body in an inactive form for life, as other viruses in its family do, and usually causes no further trouble. In certain situations, such as in people with a weakened immune system, a different test that measures the amount of EBV directly (an EBV viral load, or PCR test) may be used, but this is not part of the usual testing for mono.