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Handheld device captures airborne signs of disease
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芝加哥大学的研究人员开发了一种名为ABLE的便携式设备,能够通过冷凝稀释的空气生物标记物,检测与特定疾病相关的气体分子。该设备可在15分钟内检测空气中的非挥发性和挥发性分子,具有高灵敏度和低成本(约200美元)的特点。其应用前景广泛,包括早期疾病检测、新生儿护理、糖尿病患者的血糖监测,以及公共场所的空气质量监测。ABLE的出现有望推动诊断技术从实验室走向家庭和诊所,实现预防性和个性化医疗的新范式。

💨该设备名为ABLE(Airborne Biomarker Localization Engine),利用冷凝技术从空气中捕获生物标记物。空气中的生物标记物被浓缩成液滴,随后通过传统的液相生物传感器进行分析。

👶该设备灵感来源于对新生儿重症监护病房的观察。研究人员意识到非侵入性监测对早产儿的重要性,从而开发出该设备,旨在实现无接触、快速、灵敏的疾病诊断。

💡ABLE具有广泛的应用前景,包括早期炎症性肠病(IBD)检测、新生儿呼吸系统疾病和神经发育疾病的监测、精神健康监测以及公共场所空气质量监测等。

💰该设备成本低廉(约200美元),有望使生物标记物传感技术普及化,推动诊断技术从实验室走向家庭和诊所,实现预防性和个性化医疗。

🔬研究人员计划进一步优化ABLE设备,提高其灵敏度和能效,并探索与可穿戴传感器的实时反馈集成。他们还计划将其应用于传染病监测和食品变质检测。

A sensitive new portable device can detect gas molecules associated with certain diseases by condensing dilute airborne biomarkers into concentrated liquid droplets. According to its developers at the University of Chicago in the US, the device could be used to detect airborne viruses or bacteria in hospitals and other public places, improve neonatal care, and even allow diabetic patients to read glucose levels in their breath, to list just three examples.

Many disease biomarkers are only found in breath or ambient air at levels of a few parts per trillion. This makes them very difficult to detect compared with biomarkers in biofluids such as blood, saliva or mucus, where they are much more concentrated. Traditionally, reaching a high enough sensitivity required bulky and expensive equipment such as mass spectrometers, which are impractical for everyday environments.

Rapid and sensitive identification

Researchers led by biophysicist and materials chemist Bozhi Tian have now developed a highly portable alternative. Their new Airborne Biomarker Localization Engine (ABLE) can detect both non-volatile and volatile molecules in air in around 15 minutes.

This handheld device comprises a cooled condenser surface, an air pump and microfluidic enrichment modules, and it works in the following way. First, air that (potentially) contains biomarkers flows into a cooled chamber. Within this chamber, Tian explains, the supersaturated moisture condenses onto nanostructured superhydrophobic surfaces and forms droplets. Any particles in the air thus become suspended inside the droplets, which means they can be analysed using conventional liquid-phase biosensors such as colorimeteric test strips or electrochemical probes. This allows them to be identified rapidly with high sensitivity.

Tiny babies and a big idea

Tian says the inspiration for this study, which is detailed in Nature Chemical Engineering, came from a visit he made to a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) in 2021. “Here, I observed the vulnerability and fragility of preterm infants and realized how important non-invasive monitoring is for them,” Tian explains.

“My colleagues and I envisioned a contact-free system capable of detecting disease-related molecules in air. Our biggest challenge was sensitivity and initial trials failed to detect key chemicals,” he remembers. “We overcame this problem by developing a new enrichment strategy using nanostructured condensation and molecular sieves while also exploiting evaporation physics to stabilize and concentrate the captured biomarkers.”

The technology opens new avenues for non-contact, point-of-care diagnostics, he tells Physics World. Possible near-term applications include the early detection of ailments such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which can lead to markers of inflammation appearing in patients’ breath. Respiratory disorders and neurodevelopment conditions in babies could be detected in a similar way. Tian suggests the device could even be used for mental health monitoring via volatile stress biomarkers (again found in breath) and for monitoring air quality in public spaces such as schools and hospitals.

“Thanks to its high sensitivity and low cost (of around $200), ABLE could democratize biomarker sensing, moving diagnostics beyond the laboratory and into homes, clinics and underserved areas, allowing for a new paradigm in preventative and personalized medicine,” he says.

Widespread applications driven by novel physics

The University of Chicago scientists’ next goal is to further miniaturize and optimize the ABLE device. They are especially interested in enhancing its sensitivity and energy efficiency, as well as exploring the possibility of real-time feedback through closed-loop integration with wearable sensors. “We also plan to extend its applications to infectious disease surveillance and food spoilage detection,” Tian reveals.

The researchers are currently collaborating with health professionals to test ABLE in real-world settings such as NICUs and outpatient clinics. In the future, though, they also hope to explore novel physical processes that might improve the efficiency at which devices like these can capture hydrophobic or nonpolar airborne molecules.

According to Tian, the work has unveiled “unexpected evaporation physics” in dilute droplets with multiple components. Notably, they have seen evidence that such droplets defy the limit set by Henry’s law, which states that at constant temperature, the amount of a gas that dissolves in a liquid of a given type and volume is directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas in equilibrium with the liquid. “This opens a new physical framework for such condensation-driven sensing and lays the foundation for widespread applications in the non-contact diagnostics, environmental monitoring and public health applications mentioned,” Tian says.

The post Handheld device captures airborne signs of disease appeared first on Physics World.

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相关标签

便携设备 疾病检测 生物标记物 非接触诊断
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