Electrochemical analysis of sweat using soft bioelectronics on human skin provides a new route for noninvasive glucose monitoring without painful blood collection. However, sweat-based glucose sensing still faces many challenges, such as difficulty in sweat collection, activity variation of glucose oxidase due to lactic acid secretion and ambient temperature changes, and delamination of the enzyme when exposed to mechanical friction and skin deformation. Precise point-of-care therapy in response to the measured glucose levels is still very challenging. We present a wearable/disposable sweat-based glucose monitoring device integrated with a feedback transdermal drug delivery module. Careful multilayer patch design and miniaturization of sensors increase the efficiency of the sweat collection and sensing process. Multimodal glucose sensing, as well as its real-time correction based on pH, temperature, and humidity measurements, maximizes the accuracy of the sensing. The minimal layout design of the same sensors also enables a strip-type disposable device. Drugs for the feedback transdermal therapy are loaded on two different temperature-responsive phase change nanoparticles. These nanoparticles are embedded in hyaluronic acid hydrogel microneedles, which are additionally coated with phase change materials. This enables multistage, spatially patterned, and precisely controlled drug release in response to the patient's glucose level. The system provides a novel closed-loop solution for the noninvasive sweat-based management of diabetes mellitus.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1601314 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
October 2024
Department of Applied Sciences and Humanities, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, Jamia Milia Islamia, New Delhi, 110025, India.
Micromachines (Basel)
July 2024
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Western Macedonia, 50100 Kozani, Greece.
This study endeavored to design and develop an innovative closed-loop diagnostic and therapeutic system with the following objectives: (a) the noninvasive detection of glucose concentration in sweat utilizing nanonengineered screen-printed biosensors; (b) the management of measured data through a specialized computer system comprising both hardware and software components, thereby enabling the precise control of therapeutic responses via a patch-based nanomedicine delivery system. This initiative addresses the significant challenges inherent in the management of diabetes mellitus, including the imperative need for glucose-level monitoring to optimize glycemic control. Leveraging chronoamperometric results as a foundational dataset and the in vivo hypoglycemic activity of nanoemulsion formulations, this research underscores the efficacy and accuracy of glucose concentration estimation, decision-making mechanism responses, and transdermal hypoglycemic treatment effects, within the proposed system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Occup Saf Ergon
September 2024
Department of Building and Real Estate, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, People's Republic of China.
. This systematic review aims to report the evaluation of wearable biosensors for the real-time measurement of stress and fatigue using sweat biomarkers. .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistryOpen
August 2024
Department School of Life science, Nantong University 9#, Seyuan road, Chongchuan district, Nantong, China.
The increasing prevalence of wearable devices has sparked a growing interest in real-time health monitoring and physiological parameter tracking. This study focuses on the development of a cost-effective sweat analysis device, utilizing microfluidic technology and selective electrochemical electrodes for non-invasive monitoring of glucose and potassium ions. The device, through real-time monitoring of glucose and potassium ion levels in sweat during physical activity, issues a warning signal when reaching experimentally set thresholds (K+ concentration at 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMikrochim Acta
January 2024
Faculty of Biological Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.
Sweat is easily accessible from the human skin's surface. It is secreted by the eccrine glands and contains a wealth of physiological information, including metabolites and electrolytes like glucose and Na ions. Sweat is a particularly useful biofluid because of its easy and non-invasive access, unlike other biofluids, like blood.
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