Showing posts with label Portable. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Portable. Show all posts

Monday, 19 August 2013

Malaria could be tested early by cheap, portable device

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Academic Journal
Main Category: Medical Devices / Diagnostics
Also Included In: Tropical Diseases;  Blood / Hematology
Article Date: 19 Aug 2013 - 3:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Malaria could be tested early by cheap, portable device
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A device that measures electrical properties of red blood cells is able to detect if they are infected with malaria in the early stages. The researchers hope their findings will lead to a portable and low-cost, yet highly sensitive device that can diagnose malaria on the spot using just a drop of blood.

Anantha Chandrakasan and colleagues from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) write about how they developed and tested their experimental microfluidic device in the journal Lab Chip.

The device spreads the drop of blood on an electrode that can count individual cells as they stream past, and it can also take very accurate readings of their impedance or electrical resistance.

In previous studies, the team had already established that diseases like malaria alter the electrical properties of red blood cells.

Chandrakasan, who specializes in developing low-power electronic devices, told the press:

"Ultimately the goal would be to create a postage stamp-sized device with integrated electronics that can detect if a person has malaria and at what stage."

The researchers believe the same technology can be used to diagnose other diseases that change the electrical properties of red blood cells.

Malaria is caused by five strains of Plasmodium, a parasite that lives in the gut of the female Anopheles mosquito and passes to humans through her bite.

For this study, the researchers investigated the strain P. falciparum. When the parasite enters the human bloodstream, it invades red blood cells, making then more magnetic and more rigid.

These changes can be detected by various diagnostic devices, but they do not occur until the parasite has reached a more advanced stage, when the red blood cells have started sticking to small blood vessels, blocking circulation and causing severe symptoms.

The new device is sensitive to another property that is measurable in the earliest parasite stage, the ring stage. The property it measures is electrical resistance or impedance.

Chandrakasan, who is a principal investigator at MIT's Microsystems Technology Laboratories (MTL), and the Joseph F. and Nancy P. Keithley professor of electrical engineering, and colleagues managed to make the device so sensitive it can take very accurate measurements of the size and phase of electrical impedance of individual cells.

They also managed to find a way to stop the cells sticking to each other, and they eliminated interfering signals from the electrode substrate that the blood cells flow over.

In their study report, they describe how they tested the device on four types of cells: uninfected cells and cells containing the parasite in three different stages of development, known as ring, trophozoite and schizont.

Although the device was not sensitive enough to reliably differentiate the different stages of parasite development, the researchers were able to combine the measures mathematically so it could reliably differentiate between uninfected and infected cells, including those containing the ring stage of the parasite.

Matthias Marti, assistant professor of immunology and infectious diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health, did not take part in the study. But he describes the device as "really cool" because it can spot the difference between unifected red blood cells and blood cells infected with the parasite even when it is still very small and before it has had a chance to alter the cells very much.

The researchers hope their work will quickly lead to a portable and cheap testing kit that can rapidly diagnose malaria in places that have no labs and trained staff.

Although rapid diagnosis kits for malaria are starting to appear and are promising to overtake the traditional way of diagnosing malaria that requires a trained technician to examine blood smears under a microscope, these are not very sensitive.

"For a new device to be meaningful in the field, it would have to be more sensitive than these traditional approaches, as well as cheap and quick," says Marti.

The team is now working on converting the experimental device into something that can be realistically used in the field. For that, it will have to be portable, disposable and cheap.

They say it will also be interesting to see if they could use the device to detect malaria infection at the stage when the parasite is mature enough to pass to other humans, through mosquito bites.

Malaria: 100% protection in early vaccine trial

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD


Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Visit our medical devices / diagnostics section for the latest news on this subject.

Electric impedance microflow cytometry for characterization of cell disease states; E. Du, Sungjae Ha, Monica Diez-Silva, Ming Dao, Subra Suresh, and Anantha P. Chandrakasan; Lab Chip 2013; DOI: 10.1039/C3LC50540E; Abstract/summary.

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19 Aug. 2013. APA

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Saturday, 17 August 2013

Portable eye clinic in a smartphone

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Main Category: Eye Health / Blindness
Also Included In: Medical Devices / Diagnostics
Article Date: 16 Aug 2013 - 3:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Portable eye clinic in a smartphone
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A portable eye testing kit based on a smartphone that could revolutionize eye care in the world's poorest nations is being tested in Africa by UK researchers.

The kit is a mobile app, together with clip-on hardware, that transforms a smartphone into a low-cost portable eye clinic that can be operated by a non-expert to gather detailed clinical information, diagnose cataracts, check prescriptions for vision lenses, and even check the retina for signs of disease.

Globally, there are 285 million people with impaired vision, 39 million of whom are blind, World Health Organization statistical estimates show.

Poorer countries carry the greatest burden of eye disease - 9 out of 10 blind people live in low-income countries, mostly in areas where access to ophthalmologists and eye clinics is virtually non-existent.

At present, to run a full range of eye tests, you would need state-of-the-art hospital equipment costing more than $150,000 (about £96,000 or €112,000), and 15 trained staff to operate it.

The barrier of such high costs could come down thanks to researchers from the UK who are testing the Portable Eye Examination Kit or Peek, on 5,000 people in Kenya.

Peek was developed by experts in eye health, Dr Andrew Bastawrous at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Dr Mario Giardini at the University of St Andrews, and Dr Iain Livingstone, at the NHS's Glasgow Centre for Ophthalmic Research, together with Stewart Jordan, an independent app designer.

Money for the development came from the British Council for the Prevention of Blindness (BCPB), the Medical Research Council (MRC), Fight for Sight and the International Glaucoma Association (iga).

Dr Andrew Bastawrous, who is testing Peek against state-of-the-art hospital equipment, recently told BBC News that the patients who need it most are not able to reach the hospital because they live in remote locations and cannot afford transport anyway.

He says the hope is that Peek will provide eye care for the poorest of the poor. For example, cataracts are the most common cause of blindness, and a lot of hospitals are able to provide the surgery, but getting to the hospital for eye tests is the problem. Dr. Bastawrous said:

"What we can do using this is, the technicians can go to the patients, to their homes, examine them at their front doors and diagnose them there and then."

The tests are taking place in the Nakuru district of Kenya, which includes members of all 42 tribes residing in Kenya.

Earlier this year, Dr. Bastawrous co-authored a study that found age-related macular degeneration was the cause of blindness in 10% of people over the age of 50 in Nakuru.

A woman from Nakuru, Kenya, having a cataract scan with the Peek smartphone tool ©Peek A woman from Nakuru, Kenya, having a cataract scan with the Peek smartphone tool. This portable eye testing kit can diagnose eye problems in remote areas, where access to clinics is limited. ©Peek

Peek can diagnose a vast range of eye problems, blindness and vision impairments, including:

It can also look for crucial indicators of brain tumor and hemorrhage.

For example, the camera on the smartphone can scan the lens of the eye to check signs of cataracts, and with the help of the flash light, it can check the retina.

The phone's screen can also show a shrinking letter as a basic vision test.

The Peek system stores information about each patient together with their GPS location. Linking to Google maps, it provides a way to follow up and treat patients.

For the tests in Nakuru, the patients undergo eye exams using the smartphone, and then again with conventional eye exam equipment that is being carried around in a van.

Experts at Moorfield's Eye Hospital in London then compare the images gathered on the smartphone to the ones taken with conventional equipment.

The researchers say early results are promising: so far, about 1,000 people have had some form of treatment.

The developers hope the Peek technology will allow services to be co-ordinated, and help deliver and target mass treatment campaigns.

Peter Ackland, from the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, told the BBC he thinks Peek could be a "huge game changer:"

"At the moment we simply don't have the trained eye health staff to bring eye care services to the poorest communities.

This tool will enable us to do that with relatively untrained people."

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD


Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Visit our eye health / blindness section for the latest news on this subject. There are no references listed for this article. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

MLA

Paddock, Catharine. "Portable eye clinic in a smartphone." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 16 Aug. 2013. Web.
16 Aug. 2013. APA

Please note: If no author information is provided, the source is cited instead.


'Portable eye clinic in a smartphone'

Please note that we publish your name, but we do not publish your email address. It is only used to let you know when your message is published. We do not use it for any other purpose. Please see our privacy policy for more information.

If you write about specific medications or operations, please do not name health care professionals by name.

All opinions are moderated before being included (to stop spam). We reserve the right to amend opinions where we deem necessary.

Contact Our News Editors

For any corrections of factual information, or to contact the editors please use our feedback form.

Please send any medical news or health news press releases to:

Note: Any medical information published on this website is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional. For more information, please read our terms and conditions.



View the original article here