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Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone

Date:
October 31, 2015
Source:
Investigación y Desarrollo
Summary:
A new device provides immediate results and will be used for diagnosis of diabetes within low-income populations.
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With the participation of Mexican and international experts, the device will present immediate results and will be used for diagnosis within low-income populations.

A device that detects in saliva a biological indicator of a possible risk of type II diabetes is the development of a technological and scientific team of the Tec de Monterrey (Mexican University) in collaboration with the University of Houston. What makes this development unique is that it is adaptable to the cell phone and gives results in a few seconds, avoiding the annoying use of needles.

In other words, it is a cartridge adaptable to the mobile phone that will record whether a compound is present in saliva, which becomes visible if the patient has diabetes. "It's as simple as pregnancy tests, where the specific marker shows in a few seconds," explains project coordinator Dr. Marco Antonio Rite Palomares, director of the Biotechnology Center of the Tec de Monterrey FEMSA.

The project is planned to be completed in two years, "We wanted a device which could identify a biomarker in a sample of saliva, and it had to emit fluorescent light so a cell phone camera could records it," explains Rite Palomares.

The multidisciplinary team united scientific experts to work in enzyme technology to make visible this marker and use an analytical process; also, they developed a micro device that can be integrated into a cell phone and where one can place a saliva sample showing the results through a software.

The director of FEMSA Biotechnology Center mentions that he considered using the camera phone to detect the marker in saliva, as the resolution is getting better each year. Afterwards it was considered to make it visible through an enzymatic reaction where the biomarker is fluorescent or emits light identifiable from the rest of the compounds through a strategy that has been used in other areas of technology and is now applied to biology.

"While the idea is to make the patient's life easier, we also want to bring health care to the low-income population, helping to make and early detection before it can lead to more problems and take action to prevent high costs for the population and the government, " he added.

As part of the concluding phase of the development the team is seeking who may be interested in the mass production of the device.


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Materials provided by Investigación y Desarrollo. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Cite This Page:

Investigación y Desarrollo. "Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 31 October 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151031083535.htm>.
Investigación y Desarrollo. (2015, October 31). Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 21, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151031083535.htm
Investigación y Desarrollo. "Detecting diabetes in a saliva sample with a smart phone." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/10/151031083535.htm (accessed December 21, 2024).

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