Anonymous ID: ba73ec June 25, 2021, 7:36 a.m. No.13980318   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Engineering, biochemistry and medical researchers from across campus have combined their skills to create a hand-held rapid test for bacterial infections that can produce accurate, reliable results in less than an hour, eliminating the need to send samples to a lab.

 

Their proof-of-concept research, published today in the journal Nature Chemistry, specifically describes the test's effectiveness in diagnosing urinary tract infections from real clinical samples. The researchers are adapting the test to detect other forms of bacteria and for the rapid diagnosis of viruses, including COVID-19. They also plan to test its viability for detecting markers of cancer.

 

"It's going to mean that patients can get better treatment, faster results and avoid serious complications. It can also avoid the unnecessary use of antibiotics, which is something that can buy us time in the battle against antimicrobial resistance," says Leyla Soleymani, the paper's co-corresponding author and an associate professor of engineering physics.

 

"This will give doctors the science to support what they already suspect based on their skills and experience," says co-corresponding author Yingfu Li, a professor of biochemistry and biomedical sciences.

 

The new DNA-based technology uses a handheld device similar to a blood-glucose monitor. A microchip analyzes a droplet of bodily fluid such as blood, urine or saliva, using molecules that can detect the specific protein signature of an infection. The device, about the size of a USB stick, plugs into a smartphone, which displays the result.

 

https://phys.org/news/2021-06-lab-required-technology-infections-minutes.html