AI Article Synopsis

  • Most wearable biosensors currently focus on detecting physical stress markers, but they lack the precision required for accurate diagnosis or prevention of psychological issues.
  • Wearable biochemical sensors are an emerging technology with potential, particularly those that can measure cortisol, but they still face specificity challenges.
  • The review highlights the need for multiplex wearable sensors that can monitor multiple stress-related biochemical markers simultaneously to better understand the links between psychological stress and neuropsychiatric conditions.

Article Abstract

Most wearable biosensors aimed at capturing psychological state target stress biomarkers in the form of physical symptoms that can correlate with dysfunction in the central nervous system (CNS). However, such markers lack the specificity needed for diagnostic or preventative applications. Wearable biochemical sensors (WBSs) have the potential to fill this gap, however, the technology is still in its infancy. Most WBSs proposed thus far target cortisol. Although cortisol detection is demonstrated as a viable method for approximating the extent and severity of psychological stress, the hormone also lacks specificity. Multiplex WBSs that simultaneously target cortisol alongside other viable stress-related biochemical markers (SBMs) can prove to be indispensable for understanding how psychological stress contributes to the pathophysiology of neuropsychiatric illnesses (NPIs) and, thus, lead to the discovery of new biomarkers and more objective clinical tools. However, none target more than one SBM implicated in NPIs. Till this review, cortisol's connection to dysfunctions in the CNS, to other SBMs, and their implication in various NPIs has not been discussed in the context of developing WBS technology. As such, this review is meant to inform the biosensing and neuropsychiatric communities of viable future directions and possible challenges for WBS technology for neuropsychiatric applications.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202411339DOI Listing

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