Publication | Open Access
Label-free Bacteria Quantification in Blood Plasma by a Bioprinted Microarray Based Interferometric Point-of-Care Device
61
Citations
25
References
2018
Year
EngineeringPathogen DetectionMicroscopyBioprinted MicroarrayDisease DetectionBiomedical EngineeringBacteria DetectionBiosensing SystemsBioanalysisClinical ChemistryInfection ControlLaboratory MedicineMolecular DiagnosticsMicrofluidicsLabel-free Bacteria QuantificationDiagnostic DevicePortable Poc DeviceMedicineClinical MicrobiologyBlood PlasmaLab-on-a-chipInnovative DiagnosticsMicrobiologySepsis Patients
Existing clinical methods for bacteria detection lack speed, sensitivity, and, importantly, point-of-care (PoC) applicability. Thus, finding ways to push the sensitivity of clinical PoC biosensing technologies is crucial. Here we report a portable PoC device based on lens-free interferometric microscopy (LIM). The device employs high performance nanoplasmonics and custom bioprinted microarrays and is capable of direct label-free bacteria ( E. coli) quantification. With only one-step sample handling we offer a sample-to-data turnaround time of 40 min. Our technology features detection sensitivity of a single bacterial cell both in buffer and in diluted blood plasma and is intrinsically limited by the number of cells present in the detection volume. When employed in a hospital setting, the device has enabled accurate categorization of sepsis patients (infectious SIRS) from control groups (healthy individuals and noninfectious SIRS patients) without false positives/negatives. User-friendly on-site bacterial clinical diagnosis can thus become a reality.
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