Microfluidics and Sensors: New Tools for Real-Time Clinical Monitoring
Martyn Boutelle, Professor of Biomedical Sensors Engineering, Imperial College London
A goal for modern medicine is to protect vulnerable tissue by monitoring
the patterns of changing physical, electrical and chemical changes
taking place in tissue - ‘multimodal monitoring’. Clinicians hope such
information will allows treatments to be guided and ultimately
controlled based on the measured signals. Microfluidic lab-on-chip
devices coupled to tissue sampling using microdialysis provide an
important new way for measuring real-time chemical changes as the low
volume flow rates of microdialysis probes are ideally matched to the
length scales of microfluidic devices. Concentrations of key biomarker
molecules can then be determined continuously using either optically or
electrochemically (using amperometric, and potentiometic sensors).
Wireless devices allow analysis to take place close to the patient.
Droplet-based microfluidics, by digitizing the dialysis stream into
discrete low volume samples, both minimizes dispersion allowing very
rapid concentration changes to be measured, and allows rapid transport
of samples between patient and analysis chip. This talk will overview
successful design, optimization, automatic-calibration and use of both
continuous flow and droplet-based microfluidic analysis systems for
real-time clinical monitoring, using clinical examples from our recent
work.
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