Microneedle sensors could enable minimally-invasive, continuous molecular monitoring - informing on disease status and treatment in real-time. Wearable sensors for pharmaceuticals, for example, would create opportunities for treatments personalized to individual pharmacokinetics. Here, we demonstrate a commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) approach for microneedle sensing using an electrochemical aptamer-based sensor that detects the high-toxicity antibiotic, vancomycin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe volume of interstitial fluid (ISF) in the human body is three times that of blood. Yet, collecting diagnostically useful ISF is more challenging than collecting blood because the extraction of dermal ISF disrupts the delicate balance of pressure between ISF, blood and lymph, and because the triggered local inflammation further skews the concentrations of many analytes in the extracted fluid. In this Perspective, we overview the most meaningful differences in the make-up of ISF and blood, and discuss why ISF cannot be viewed generally as a diagnostically useful proxy for blood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen attempting to integrate single-molecule fluorescence microscopy with microfabricated devices such as microfluidic channels, fabrication constraints may prevent using traditional coverslips. Instead, the fabricated devices may require imaging through material with a different thickness or index of refraction. Altering either can easily reduce the quality of the image formation (measured by the Strehl ratio) by a factor of 2 or more, reducing the signal-to-noise ratio accordingly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroneedles have been demonstrated to be a minimally invasive technique for sampling dermal interstitial fluid (ISF). Shotgun quantitative proteomics has already identified hundreds of proteins in ISF and quantitatively compared the proteome to matching serum and plasma. Interstitial fluid was determined to be a viable minimally invasive alternative to blood-derived fluids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the use of solution-based 3D nanoarchitectures for optics, drug delivery, and cancer treatment, the precise nanoparticle architecture morphologies, architecture sizes, interparticle distances, and the assembly stability are all critical to their functionality. 3D nanoparticle architectures in solution are difficult to characterize, as few techniques can provide individualized information on interparticle spacing (defined by linkage molecule), nanoparticle assembly size, morphology, and identification of false aggregation. Bulk characterization techniques, including small angle x-ray scattering, can provide architecture sizes, though they are unable to precisely measure differences within interparticle spacings for individual architectures and can falsely measure assemblies caused by non-linkage grouped nanoparticles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDermal interstitial fluid (ISF) is an underutilized information-rich biofluid potentially useful in health status monitoring applications whose contents remain challenging to characterize. Here, we present a facile microneedle approach for dermal ISF extraction with minimal pain and no blistering for human subjects and rats. Extracted ISF volumes were sufficient for determining transcriptome, and proteome signatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterstitial fluid (ISF) has recently garnered interest as a biological fluid that could be used as an alternate to blood for biomedical applications, diagnosis, and therapy. ISF extraction techniques are promising because they are less invasive and less painful than venipuncture. ISF is an alternative, incompletely characterized source of physiological data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs wearable fitness devices have gained commercial acceptance, interest in real-time monitoring of an individual's physiological status using noninvasive techniques has grown. Microneedles have been proposed as a minimally invasive technique for sampling the dermal interstitial fluid (ISF) for clinical monitoring and diagnosis, but little is known about its composition. In this study, a novel microneedle array was used to collect dermal ISF from three healthy human donors and compared with matching serum and plasma samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently microneedles have been explored for transdermal monitoring of biomarkers with the goal to achieve time-sensitive clinical information for routine point-of-care health monitoring. In this highlight we provide a general overview of recent progress in microneedle-based sensing research, including: (a) glucose monitoring, (b) ex vitro microneedle diagnostic systems for general health monitoring with an emphasis on sensor construction, and (c) in vivo use of microneedle sensors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe determination of electrolytes is invaluable for point of care diagnostic applications. An ion selective transdermal microneedle sensor is demonstrated for potassium by integrating a hollow microneedle with a microfluidic chip to extract fluid through a channel towards a downstream solid-state ion-selective-electrode (ISE). 3D porous carbon and 3D porous graphene electrodes, made via interference lithography, are compared as solid-state transducers for ISE's and evaluated for electrochemical performance, stability, and selectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNi was deposited onto lithographically-defined conductive three dimensional carbon networks to form asymmetric pseudo-capacitive electrodes. A real capacity of above 500 mF cm(-2), or specific capacitance of ∼2100 F g(-1) near the theoretical value, has been achieved. After a rapid thermal annealing process, amorphous carbon was partially converted into multilayer graphene depending on the annealing temperature and time duration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 3D finite element model was developed to optimize the kinetics and mass transfer characteristics of low concentration, 18 bp ssDNA targets in bulk media solution, to 18 bp complimentary oligonucleotide probes immobilized on electrochemical detection electrodes positioned along the length of a microfluidic channel. Conditions considered in the model were fluid flow rate, diffusion time, DNA melting temperature, number of matching base pairs, and temperature of the fluid in the channel. System optimization was based on maximizing the uniformity and surface concentration of the specifically bound hybridized DNA, minimizing waste volume generation and the hybridization time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTailor-made highly ordered macro/mesoporous hierarchical metal architectures have been created by combining sphere lithography, membrane template electrodeposition and alloy-etching processes. The new double-template preparation route involves the electrodeposition of Au/Ag alloy within the interstitial (void) spaces of polystyrene (PS) microspheres which are closely packed within the micropores of a polycarbonate membrane (PC), followed by dealloying of the Ag component and dissolution of the microsphere and membrane templates. The net results of combining such sphere lithography and silver etching is the creation of highly regular three-dimensional macro/mesoporous gold architecture with well-controlled sizes and shapes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrostatic interaction plays a leading role in nanoparticle interactions with membrane architectures and can lead to effects such as nanoparticle binding and membrane disruption. In this work, the effects of nanoparticles (NPs) interacting with mixed lipid systems were investigated, indicating an ability to tune both NP binding to membranes and membrane disruption. Lipid membrane assemblies (LBAs) were created using a combination of charged, neutral, and gel-phase lipids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of a minimally invasive multiplexed monitoring system for rapid analysis of biologically-relevant molecules could offer individuals suffering from chronic medical conditions facile assessment of their immediate physiological state. Furthermore, it could serve as a research tool for analysis of complex, multifactorial medical conditions. In order for such a multianalyte sensor to be realized, it must be minimally invasive, sampling of interstitial fluid must occur without pain or harm to the user, and analysis must be rapid as well as selective.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA simple and facile method to fabricate 3D graphene architectures is presented. Pyrolyzed photoresist films (PPF) can easily be patterned into a variety of 2D and 3D structures. We demonstrate how prestructured PPF can be chemically converted into hollow, interconnected 3D multilayered graphene structures having pore sizes around 500 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein is described the fabrication and use of a plastic multilayer 3-channel microfluidic fixture. Multilayer devices were produced by laser machining of plastic polymethylmethacrylate and polyethyleneterapthalate laminates by ablation. The fixture consisted of an array of nine individually addressable gold or gold/ITO working electrodes, and a resistive platinum heating element.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe development of a microneedle-based biosensor array for multiplexed in situ detection of exercise-induced metabolic acidosis, tumor microenvironment, and other variations in tissue chemistry is described. Simultaneous and selective amperometric detection of pH, glucose, and lactate over a range of physiologically relevant concentrations in complex media is demonstrated. Furthermore, materials modified with a cell-resistant (Lipidure(®)) coating were shown to inhibit macrophage adhesion; no signs of coating delamination were noted over a 48-h period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the development of a microneedle-based multiplexed drug delivery actuator that enables the controlled delivery of multiple therapeutic agents. Two individually-addressable channels on a single microneedle array, each paired with its own reservoir and conducting polymer nanoactuator, are used to deliver various permutations of two unique chemical species. Upon application of suitable redox potentials to the selected actuator, the conducting polymer is able to undergo reversible volume changes, thereby serving to release a model chemical agent in a controlled fashion through the corresponding microneedle channels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterferometric lithographically fabricated porous carbon acts as active substrates for Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) applications with enhancement factors ranging from 7 to 9 orders of magnitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, carbon fiber electrodes were incorporated within a hollow microneedle array, which was fabricated using a digital micromirror device-based stereolithography instrument. Cell proliferation on the acrylate-based polymer used in microneedle fabrication was examined with human dermal fibroblasts and neonatal human epidermal keratinocytes. Studies involving full-thickness cadaveric porcine skin and trypan blue dye demonstrated that the hollow microneedles remained intact after puncturing the outermost layer of cadaveric porcine skin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonenzymatic glucose oxidation is demonstrated on highly faceted palladium nanowflower-modified porous carbon electrodes fabricated by interference lithography. Varying electrodeposition parameters were used to control the final shape and morphology of the deposited nanoparticles on the 3D porous carbon which showed a 12 times increase in the electrochemically active surface area over analogous planar electrodes. Extremely fast amperometric glucose responses (achieving 95% of the steady state limiting current in less than 5s) with a linear range from 1 to 10mM and a detection limit of 10 μM were demonstrated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
November 2010
Increased mass transport due to hemispherical diffusion is observed to occur in 3D porous carbon electrodes defined by interferometric lithography. Enhanced catalytic methanol oxidation, after modifying the porous carbon with palladium nanoparticles, and uncharacteristically uniform conducting polymer deposition into the structures are demonstrated. Both examples result in two regions of hierarchical porosity that can be created to maximize surface area, via nanostructuring, within the extended porous network, while taking advantage of hemispherical diffusion through the open pores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a miniaturized high-throughput sensor array that will augment biofuel technology by facilitating in situ biochemical measurements upon micrometer-scale surfaces of leaves, stems, or petals. We used semiconductor processing to photopattern Foturan glass wafers and fabricated gold-plated microscopic electrode needles (ElectroNeedles) that pierced 125-mum-thick surfaces without deformation. The 5 x 5 or 10 x 10 arrays of ElectroNeedles can analyze 25 or 100 samples simultaneously, increasing throughput.
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