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激光测血糖,准确且无创 精选

已有 7722 次阅读 2014-8-23 12:20 |个人分类:期刊论文|系统分类:论文交流| 血糖仪

目前在国内外销售的血糖测量仪无一例外地都需要针扎指尖取血,即为“有创”、“离体”测量,能否开发一种“无创”、“活体”血糖测量仪呢?

最近,美国普林斯顿大学的电子工程师制造出一款激光血糖测量仪,可以无创、活体测量血糖浓度,测试者只要将手掌放在激光光束发射源,就可以在显示屏上读数,非常简单、快捷、实用。

一般血糖测量仪的误差率应在20%以内,一些早期血糖仪的灵敏度基本不会超出80%的范围,而这款新式血糖仪的灵敏度则为84%。研制人员表示,检测准确性仍有改进空间。

不过,这台血糖仪的体积还比较庞大,仪器的配件也比较多。值得期待的是,科研人员目前正准备在移动平台上开发该仪器,届时一台小巧玲珑的便携式新型血糖测量仪将问世。


Laser device may end pin pricks, improve quality of life for diabetics

Date:
August 21, 2014
Source:
Princeton University, Engineering School
Summary:
Researchers have developed a way to use a laser to measure people's blood sugar, and, with more work to shrink the laser system to a portable size, the technique could allow diabetics to check their condition without pricking themselves to draw blood. In a new article, the researchers describe how they measured blood sugar by directing their specialized laser at a person's palm.


The new monitor uses a laser, instead of blood sample, to read blood sugar levels. The laser is directed at the person's palm, passes through skin cells and is partially absorbed by sugar molecules, allowing researchers to calculate the level of blood sugar.
Credit: Image courtesy of Princeton University, Engineering School

Princeton University researchers have developed a way to use a laser to measure people's blood sugar, and, with more work to shrink the laser system to a portable size, the technique could allow diabetics to check their condition without pricking themselves to draw blood.

"We are working hard to turn engineering solutions into useful tools for people to use in their daily lives," said Claire Gmachl, the Eugene Higgins Professor of Electrical Engineering and the project's senior researcher. "With this work we hope to improve the lives of many diabetes sufferers who depend on frequent blood glucose monitoring."

In an article published June 23 in the journalBiomedical Optics Express, the researchers describe how they measured blood sugar by directing their specialized laser at a person's palm. The laser passes through the skin cells, without causing damage, and is partially absorbed by the sugar molecules in the patient's body. The researchers use the amount of absorption to measure the level of blood sugar.

Sabbir Liakat, the paper's lead author, said the team was pleasantly surprised at the accuracy of the method. Glucose monitors are required to produce a blood-sugar reading within 20 percent of the patient's actual level; even an early version of the system met that standard. The current version is 84 percent accurate, Liakat said.

"It works now but we are still trying to improve it," said Liakat, a graduate student in electrical engineering.

When the team first started, the laser was an experimental setup that filled up a moderate-sized workbench. It also needed an elaborate cooling system to work. Gmachl said the researchers have solved the cooling problem, so the laser works at room temperature. The next step is to shrink it.

"This summer, we are working to get the system on a mobile platform to take it places such as clinics to get more measurements," Liakat said. "We are looking for a larger dataset of measurements to work with."

The key to the system is the infrared laser's frequency. What our eyes perceive as color is created by light's frequency (the number of light waves that pass a point in a certain time). Red is the lowest frequency of light that humans normally can see, and infrared's frequency is below that level. Current medical devices often use the "near-infrared," which is just beyond what the eye can see. This frequency is not blocked by water, so it can be used in the body, which is largely made up of water. But it does interact with many acids and chemicals in the skin, so it makes it impractical to use for detecting blood sugar.

Mid-infrared light, however, is not as much affected by these other chemicals, so it works well for blood sugar. But mid-infrared light is difficult to harness with standard lasers. It also requires relatively high power and stability to penetrate the skin and scatter off bodily fluid. (The target is not the blood but fluid called dermal interstitial fluid, which has a strong correlation with blood sugar.)

The breakthrough came from the use of a new type of device that is particularly adept at producing mid-infrared frequencies -- a quantum cascade laser.

In many lasers, the frequency of the beam depends on the material that makes up the laser -- a helium-neon laser, for example, produces a certain frequency band of light. But in a quantum cascade laser, in which electrons pass through a "cascade" of semiconductor layers, the beam can be set to one of a number of different frequencies. The ability to specify the frequency allowed the researchers to produce a laser in the mid-infrared region. Recent improvements in quantum cascade lasers also provided for increased power and stability needed to penetrate the skin.

To conduct their experiment, the researchers used the laser to measure the blood sugar of three healthy people before and after they each ate 20 jellybeans, which raise blood sugar levels. The researchers also checked the measurements with a finger-prick test. They conducted the measurements repeatedly over several weeks.

The researchers said their results indicated that the laser measurements readings produced average errors somewhat larger than the standard blood sugar monitors, but remained within the clinical requirement for accuracy.

"Because the quantum cascade laser can be designed to emit light across a very wide wavelength range, its usability is not just for glucose detection, but could conceivably be used for other medical sensing and monitoring applications," Gmachl said.

Story Source:

The above story is based on materials provided by Princeton University, Engineering School. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Journal Reference:

  1. Sabbir Liakat, Kevin A. Bors, Laura Xu, Callie M. Woods, Jessica Doyle, Claire F. Gmachl. Noninvasive in vivo glucose sensing on human subjects using mid-infrared light. Biomedical Optics Express, 2014; 5 (7): 2397 DOI:10.1364/BOE.5.002397




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