The Asian Age

NEW DEVICE TO CHECK DIABETES THROUGH SWEAT

- — PTI

Dallas, Texas: Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have developed a new wearable device that can help manage diabetes by monitoring the patient’s sweat, an advance that may spell the end for painful needle jabs. The wearable diagnostic biosensor can detect three interconne­cted compounds — cortisol, glucose and interleuki­n-6 — in sweat for up to a week without loss of signal integrity. “Type 2 diabetes affects so many people. If you have to manage and regulate this chronic problem, these markers are the levers that will help you do that,” said Shalini Prasad, professor at The University of Texas at Dallas in the US. “We believe we’ve created the first diagnostic wearable that can monitor these compounds for up to a week, which goes beyond the type of single use monitors that are on the market today,” said Prasad. “If a person has chronic stress, their cortisol levels increase, and their resulting insulin resistance will gradually drive their glucose levels out of the normal range,” said Prasad. “At that point, one could become prediabeti­c, which can progress to type 2 diabetes, and so on. If that happens, your body is under a state of inflammati­on, and this inflammato­ry marker, interleuki­n-6, will indicate that your organs are starting to be affected,” she said. The team showed that the biomarker measuremen­ts are reliable even with a tiny amount of sweat - just one to three microlitre­s, much less than the 25 to 50 previously believed necessary. “We wanted to make a product more useful than something disposable after a single use,” Prasad said. “It also need only your ambient sweat, not a huge amount.”

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