Bacterial infections, increasingly resistant to common antibiotics, pose a global health challenge. Traditional diagnostics often depend on slow cell culturing, leading to empirical treatments that accelerate antibiotic resistance. We present a novel large-volume microscopy (LVM) system for rapid, point-of-care bacterial detection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColorimetric sensors are widely used because of their inherent advantages including accuracy, rapid response, ease-of-use, and low costs; however, they usually lack reusability, which precludes the continuous use of a single sensor. We have developed a threshold-responsive colorimetric system that enables repeated analyte measurements by a single colorimetric sensor. The threshold responsive algorithm automatically adjusts the sensor exposure time to the analyte and measurement frequency according to the sensor response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid point-of-care (POC) diagnosis of bacterial infection diseases provides clinical benefits of prompt initiation of antimicrobial therapy and reduction of the overuse/misuse of unnecessary antibiotics for nonbacterial infections. We present here a POC compatible method for rapid bacterial infection detection in 10 min. We use a large-volume solution scattering imaging (LVSi) system with low magnifications (1-2×) to visualize bacteria in clinical samples, thus eliminating the need for culture-based isolation and enrichment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo combat the ongoing public health threat of antibiotic-resistant infections, a technology that can quickly identify infecting bacterial pathogens and concurrently perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) in point-of-care settings is needed. Here, we develop a technology for point-of-care AST with a low-magnification solution scattering imaging system and a real-time video-based object scattering intensity detection method. The low magnification (1-2×) optics provides sufficient volume for direct imaging of bacteria in urine samples, avoiding the time-consuming process of culture-based bacterial isolation and enrichment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWith the increasing prevalence of antibiotic resistance, the need to develop antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) technologies is urgent. The current challenge has been to perform the antibiotic susceptibility testing in short time, directly with clinical samples, and with antibiotics over a broad dynamic range of clinically relevant concentrations. Here, a technology for point-of-care diagnosis of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in urinary tract infections, by imaging the clinical urine samples directly with an innovative large volume solution scattering imaging (LVSi) system and analyzing the image sequences with a single-cell division tracking method is developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntibiotic resistance is an increasing public health threat. To combat it, a fast method to determine the antibiotic susceptibility of infecting pathogens is required. Here we present an optical imaging-based method to track the motion of single bacterial cells and generate a model to classify active and inactive cells based on the motion patterns of the individual cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe emergence of antibiotic resistance has prompted the development of rapid antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) technologies that will enable evidence-based treatment and promote antimicrobial stewardship. To date, many rapid AST methods have been developed, but few are able to be performed on clinical samples directly. Here we developed a large volume light scattering microscopy technique that tracks phenotypic features of single bacterial cells directly in clinical urine samples without sample enrichment or culturing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTimely determination of antimicrobial susceptibility for a bacterial infection enables precision prescription, shortens treatment time, and helps minimize the spread of antibiotic resistant infections. Current antimicrobial susceptibility testing (AST) methods often take several days and thus impede these clinical and health benefits. Here, we present an AST method by imaging freely moving bacterial cells in urine in real time and analyzing the videos with a deep learning algorithm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiagnosing antibiotic-resistant bacteria currently requires sensitive detection of phenotypic changes associated with antibiotic action on bacteria. Here, we present an optical imaging-based approach to quantify bacterial membrane deformation as a phenotypic feature in real-time with a nanometer scale (∼9 nm) detection limit. Using this approach, we found two types of antibiotic-induced membrane deformations in different bacterial strains: polymyxin B induced relatively uniform spatial deformation of Escherichia coli O157:H7 cells leading to change in cellular volume and ampicillin-induced localized spatial deformation leading to the formation of bulges or protrusions on uropathogenic E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfectious diseases caused by bacterial pathogens are a worldwide burden. Serious bacterial infection-related complications, such as sepsis, affect over a million people every year with mortality rates ranging from 30% to 50%. Crucial clinical microbiology laboratory responsibilities associated with patient management and treatment include isolating and identifying the causative bacterium and performing antibiotic susceptibility tests (ASTs), which are labor-intensive, complex, imprecise, and slow (taking days, depending on the growth rate of the pathogen).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, a repeatable assembling and disassembling electrochemical aptamer cytosensor was proposed for the sensitive detection of human liver hepatocellular carcinoma cells (HepG2) based on a dual recognition and signal amplification strategy. A high-affinity thiolated TLS11a aptamer, covalently attached to a gold electrode through Au-thiol interactions, was adopted to recognize and capture the target HepG2 cells. Meanwhile, the G-quadruplex/hemin/aptamer and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) modified gold nanoparticles (G-quadruplex/hemin/aptamer-AuNPs-HRP) nanoprobe was designed.
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