Measuring Markers of Liver Function Using a Micropatterned Paper Device Designed for Blood from a Fingerstick
Article 2012 en
Authors
SV
S.J. Vella
PB
Patrick Beattie
RC
Rebecca Cademartiri
Abstract
1 min read
This paper describes a paper-based microfluidic device that measures two enzymatic markers of liver function (alkaline phosphatase, ALP, and aspartate aminotransferase, AST) and total serum protein. A device consists of four components: (i) a top plastic sheet, (ii) a filter membrane, (iii) a patterned paper chip containing the reagents necessary for analysis, and (iv) a bottom plastic sheet. The device performs both the sample preparation (separating blood plasma from erythrocytes) and the assays; it also enables both qualitative and quantitative analysis of data. The data obtained from the paper-microfluidic devices show standard deviations in calibration runs and "spiked" standards that are acceptable for routine clinical use. This device illustrates a type of test useable for a range of assays in resource-poor settings.
Nira R. Pollock, Jason P. Rolland, Shailendra Kumar, Patrick Beattie, Sidhartha Jain, Farzad Noubary, Vicki L. Wong, Rebecca A. Pohlmann, Una Ryan, George M M Whitesides
Audrey K. Ellerbee, Scott T. Phillips, Adam Siegel, Katherine A. Mirica, Andres W. Martinez, Pierre Striehl, Nina Jain, Mara Prentiss, George M M Whitesides
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.