Publication | Closed Access
In Vivo Fluorescence Detection of Glucose Using a Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube Optical Sensor: Design, Fluorophore Properties, Advantages, and Disadvantages
276
Citations
31
References
2005
Year
Photonic SensorEngineeringBiomedical EngineeringBiosensorsSensor ViabilityBioanalysisVivo Glucose DetectionFluorophore PropertiesNanosensorGlucose LevelsBiophysicsFluorescence ImagingBiophotonicsSingle-molecule DetectionOptical SensorsVivo Fluorescence DetectionBioelectronicsBlood Glucose MonitoringMedicineOptical Sensor
In this work, several aspects of in vivo glucose detection using a nanotube-based optical sensor are considered. The optical properties of commonly used organic and nanoparticle fluorescent probes are compared with respect to quantum yield, human tissue penetration, and photobleaching stability. The latter two factors are shown to dominate sensor viability and require a near-infrared nanoparticle fluorophore for practical device operation. The dynamics of a model optical sensor are compared to a flux-measuring electrochemical sensor of equal area using a mathematical simulation of a healthy patient ingesting three predefined meals per day. Both sensors demonstrate an approximately linear response to blood glucose levels. It is shown that the optical sensor, which transduces glucose concentration, not flux, directly is significantly more stable to membrane biofouling.
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