Literature
Smartphones can tell if you are pregnant: Study
London, July 2
Researchers have developed a
self-contained fibre optic sensor for smartphones that can be used in a
wide variety of biomolecular tests, including those for detecting
pregnancy or monitoring diabetes.
The readings of the sensor can run through an application on a smartphone which provide real-time results.
"When
properly provisioned, the smartphone-user has the ability to monitor
multiple types of body fluids, including: blood, urine, saliva, sweat or
breath," said the researchers from University of Hanover, Germany.
The
sensor uses the optical phenomenon of surface plasmon resonance (SPR)
-- which occurs when light causes electrons on the surface of a thin
film to jostle -- to detect the composition of a liquid or the presence
of particular biomolecules or trace gases.
"We have the potential
to develop small and robust lab-on-a-chip devices for smartphones. So,
surface plasmon resonance sensors could become ubiquitous now," said
study co-author Kort Bremer.
In case of medical applications, the
sensor readings can be combined with the Global Positioning System
(GPS) signal of a smartphone and users can then be guided to the next
drug store, hospital or the ambulance.
Surface plasmon resonance
is a phenomenon commonly used for biosensing, but typically requires
bulky lab equipment involving both a light detector and light source.
Fortunately,
smartphones already have both of these, allowing the minimalist,
U-shaped device the researchers designed to consist solely of a
400-micrometer diameter core multimode fibre with a silver-coated
sensing region.
In subsequent experiments, the sensitivity of the
device was tested using various concentrations of glycerol, and the
team confirmed it was on par with current equipment, at a fraction of
the cost and size.
The results appeared in the journal Optics Express.