Parasitic helminths are usually known as undesired pathogens, causing various diseases in both human and animal species. In this study, we explore supercapacitance/resistance behaviors as a novel probe for rapid identification and direct differentiation of , (with and without larvae), , , and eggs. This claim is attributed to some characteristics, such as grave supercapacitance/area, high-energy storage/area, large power/egg, huge permittivity, and great electrical break-down potential, respectively (Fasciola hepatica: 2,158, 0.485, 2.7 × 10, 267, 52.6, without larvae: 2,825, 0.574, 3.0 × 10, 351, 68.4, with larvae: 4,519, 0.716, 2.4 × 10, 1.96, 97.6, : 1,581, 0.219, 2.8 × 10, 1.96, 48.8, : 714, 0.149, 2.2 × 10, 0.88, 35.2, : 3,738, 0.619, 4.7 × 10, 4.63, 84.4), and durable capacitance up to at least 15,000 sequential cycles at different scan rates (between 2.0 × 10 and 120.0 V s) as well as highly differentiated resistance between 400 and 600 Ω. These traits are measured by the "" method, at the giga ohm sealed condition (6.18 ± 0.12 GΩ cm, = 5). Significant detection ranges are detected for each capacitance and resistance with gradient limits as large as at least 880 to 1,000 mF and 400 to 600 Ω depending on the type of helminth egg. The effect of water in the structure of helminth eggs has also been investigated with acceptable reproducibility (RSD 7%-10%, = 5). These intrinsic characteristics would provide novel facilitators for direct helminth egg identification in comparison with several methods, such as ELISA, PCR, and microscopic methods.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8685256 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2021.782380 | DOI Listing |
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