Elisabeth Manville
May 30, 2012
Featured

New chip could diagnose HIV and leukemia

Diagnosing diseases such as HIV and leukemia could soon be as simple as screening cells using an inexpensive, portable device. The new chip can focus cells into a single stream and assess them in three ways using optical sensors, a process called flow cytometry. Most cases of HIV are diagnosed using flow cytometry, but traditional methods can be costly and complex. The new device could make it possible to utilize flow cytometry techniques in a clinical setting for as cheap as $1,000 a device, compared with $100,000 for current machines. The developers of the device used microfluidic drifting to create the focused stream of particles and used pre-existing fibers for the optical-fiber delivered laser beams and optical signals of the chip. "Our machine is small enough it can be operated by battery, which makes it usable in Africa and other remote locations," Tony Jun Huang, a professor at Penn State who was part of the team that designed the device, said.

2 Comments
Daniel PorterMay 30, 2012
I bet flow cytometry could be a useful technique in a variety of fields -- could they possibly implement a single FC device for a variety of applications?
Aurora SterlingMay 30, 2012
I don't see why not. Seems like it would be fairly straightforward to adapt this for other uses.
Related Articles
Elisabeth Manville
Jan 23, 2012
Biochip can measure glucose levels in saliva
Engineers at Brown University have designed a biochip that could mean a less invasive method of testing glucose levels for... Read More
Elisabeth Manville
Apr 25, 2012
UC San Diego student develops ‘microbubbles’ to improve cancer diagnosis techniques
A PhD student in bioengineering at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) is developing a new imaging technique that... Read More
Ann Conkle
May 23, 2012
The nanotechnology of diagnosis
A new study led by University of Kentucky researchers shows a new way to precisely detect a single chemical at... Read More