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This Article is From Aug 21, 2019

IIT Hyderabad Researchers Develop Sensor Device To Rapidly Detect Heart Diseases

A research team from IIT Hyderabad, in collaboration with research institute across the world, has developed a device that can detect heart disease with high speed, sensitivity, and reliability.

IIT Hyderabad Researchers Develop Sensor Device To Rapidly Detect Heart Diseases
IIT Hyderabad research team has developed a device to detect heart disease rapidly
New Delhi:

A research team from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Hyderabad, in collaboration with research institute across the world, has developed and successfully tested a device that can detect heart disease with high speed, sensitivity, and reliability. The research has promising implications not just in the diagnosis or prediction of heart disorders within minutes but also in detection of other diseases.

The Research Team is headed by Prof. Renu John, Head, Department of Biomedical Engineering, IIT Hyderabad. Prof. Renu John's studies on microfluidics would help in building biomarker-based biosensors that could be used for instantaneous detection of heart attack and other cardiac diseases. Biosensors are tools that are used by health providers for both clinical assessment of existing heart diseases and to identify vulnerable patients at risk for CVD.

The research team's work was recently published in the reputed peer-reviewed Journal of Materials Chemistry B.

Elaborating on this collaborative multi-institutional Research, Prof. Renu John said, "Biomarkers are biological molecules that represent health and disease states. They are specific chemicals that are released in the body in response to certain physiological conditions. Cardiac troponins or cTns, for example, are biomarkers of heart diseases and are conventionally detected in the blood stream using antibodies that bind specifically to them. Biosensors are devices that combine the sensing element (e.g. antibody) with a transducer that converts the interaction of antibody into electrical or optical signal that can be measured. Conventional biosensing includes such techniques as ELISA, chemiluminescent immunoassay and radioimmunoassay."

Prof. B.D. Malhotra from Delhi Technological University said, "The major issue with the conventional assays for the detection of cTns relates to poor sensitivity and limit of detection. Improvements in detecting biosensors such as cTns in the blood require improvements in the design of the biosensor."

Prof. Malhotra believes that the technique can be extended to other diseases as well by varying the type of biomarker/antibody that is attached to the nanospheres. Microfluidics based biosensing thus offers new opportunities in areas of biological engineering, biomedical studies, point-of-care diagnostics, and environmental monitoring.

There has been increased interest in the past decade to develop microfluidics-based sensors for biomedical applications. The field of microfluidics deals with the manipulation of very small volumes of fluids in the range of quadrillionth of a liter - in effect being a 'miniaturized plumbing' activity that can squeeze an entire lab into a single micro-sized device.

At such minute volume scales, fluids behave in interesting ways, which makes unusual applications possible. Microfluidics-based biosensors can enable portable analytical devices that can provide almost instantaneous results, compared to long-drawn out lab-tests.

Nanosized materials - materials that are a hundred thousand times smaller than the thickness of a single human hair - are often used in microfluidics-based biosensors as the transducer to convert the bio-chemical reaction into an optical or electrical signal.

Prof. Renu John's team and collaborators from IIT Kanpur, Zoological survey of India, Iowa State University and Delhi Technological University, used hollow nickel vanadate nanospheres, modified with chitosan and loaded with antibodies of cTns in a microfluidic setup. When blood containing the CVD biomarker cTns was passed through the biofluidic setup loaded with the biosensing nanospheres, cTns binds with the antibody and induces an electrical signal in the nanosphere, which is then detected.

Prof. Renu John and his team tested the performance of the microfluidic biosensors using blood serum of cardiac patients and compared the results with those of conventional chemiluminescence assays. They found that the microfluidic devices could detect the CVD biomarker cTns with extremely high degree of accuracy and sensitivity. cTns levels as low as 0.000000000005 grams in one milliliter of blood could be detected, which makes this technique a very useful tool for detection of cardiovascular maladies.

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