TY - JOUR
T1 - A skin-interfaced, miniaturized platform for triggered induction, capture and colorimetric multicomponent analysis of microliter volumes of sweat
AU - Kim, Joohee
AU - Oh, Seyong
AU - Yang, Da Som
AU - Rugg, Larissa
AU - Mathur, Radhika
AU - Kwak, Sung Soo
AU - Yoo, Seonggwang
AU - Li, Shupeng
AU - Kanatzidis, Evangelos E.
AU - Lee, Geumbee
AU - Yoon, Hong Joon
AU - Huang, Yonggang
AU - Ghaffari, Roozbeh
AU - McColley, Susanna A.
AU - Rogers, John A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2024/6/1
Y1 - 2024/6/1
N2 - Eccrine sweat can serve as a source of biomarkers for assessing physiological health and nutritional balance, for tracking loss of essential species from the body and for evaluating exposure to hazardous substances. The growing interest in this relatively underexplored class of biofluid arises in part from its non-invasive ability for capture and analysis. The simplest devices, and the only ones that are commercially available, exploit soft microfluidic constructs and colorimetric assays with purely passive modes of operation. The most sophisticated platforms exploit batteries, electronic components and radio hardware for inducing sweat, for electrochemical evaluation of its content and for wireless transmission of this information. The work reported here introduces a technology that combines the advantages of these two different approaches, in the form of a cost-effective, easy-to-use device that supports on-demand evaluation of multiple biomarkers in sweat. This flexible, skin-interfaced, miniaturized system incorporates a hydrogel that contains an approved drug to activate eccrine sweat glands, electrodes and a simple circuit and battery to delivery this drug by iontophoresis through the surface of the skin, microfluidic channels and microreservoirs to capture the induced sweat, and multiple colorimetric assays to evaluate the concentrations of chloride, zinc, and iron. As demonstrated in healthy human participants monitored before and after a meal, such devices yield results that match those of traditional laboratory analysis techniques. Clinical studies that involve cystic fibrosis pediatric patients illustrate the use of this technology as a simple, painless, and reliable alternative to traditional hospital systems for measurements of sweat chloride.
AB - Eccrine sweat can serve as a source of biomarkers for assessing physiological health and nutritional balance, for tracking loss of essential species from the body and for evaluating exposure to hazardous substances. The growing interest in this relatively underexplored class of biofluid arises in part from its non-invasive ability for capture and analysis. The simplest devices, and the only ones that are commercially available, exploit soft microfluidic constructs and colorimetric assays with purely passive modes of operation. The most sophisticated platforms exploit batteries, electronic components and radio hardware for inducing sweat, for electrochemical evaluation of its content and for wireless transmission of this information. The work reported here introduces a technology that combines the advantages of these two different approaches, in the form of a cost-effective, easy-to-use device that supports on-demand evaluation of multiple biomarkers in sweat. This flexible, skin-interfaced, miniaturized system incorporates a hydrogel that contains an approved drug to activate eccrine sweat glands, electrodes and a simple circuit and battery to delivery this drug by iontophoresis through the surface of the skin, microfluidic channels and microreservoirs to capture the induced sweat, and multiple colorimetric assays to evaluate the concentrations of chloride, zinc, and iron. As demonstrated in healthy human participants monitored before and after a meal, such devices yield results that match those of traditional laboratory analysis techniques. Clinical studies that involve cystic fibrosis pediatric patients illustrate the use of this technology as a simple, painless, and reliable alternative to traditional hospital systems for measurements of sweat chloride.
KW - Bioelectronics
KW - Health monitoring
KW - Sweat collection
KW - Sweat induction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186540827&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bios.2024.116166
DO - 10.1016/j.bios.2024.116166
M3 - Article
C2 - 38428069
AN - SCOPUS:85186540827
SN - 0956-5663
VL - 253
JO - Biosensors and Bioelectronics
JF - Biosensors and Bioelectronics
M1 - 116166
ER -