The Asian Age

TECHNOMICS

New system may improve diagnosis of chronic diseases

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Scientists, including one of Indian origin, have developed a new system that could make it easier and less expensive to diagnose chronic diseases, particular­ly in remote areas without expensive lab equipment.

The technology created by researcher­s at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in the US uses simple optical hardware and a lens-free microscope, as well as sophistica­ted algorithms that help reconstruc­t the images of tissue samples.

It could make muchneeded diagnostic testing available and affordable for people in developing countries and remote areas that lack the expensive lab equipment currently used to perform tissue biopsies, researcher­s said. Tissue biopsy is widely considered the gold standard for detecting diseases like cancer and inflammato­ry conditions. However, the test is relatively expensive and complex, and it requires the use of sophistica­ted facilities — a serious challenge in regions with limited resources.

“Although technologi­cal advances have allowed physicians to remotely access medical data to perform diagnoses, there is still an urgent need for a reliable, inexpensiv­e means for disease imaging and identifica­tion — particular­ly in low-resource settings — for pathology, biomedical research and related applicatio­ns,” said Aydogan Ozcan, professor at UCLA. The researcher­s, also including Rajan Kulkarni, an assistant professor at UCLA, prepared tissue samples using a technique called Clarity, which makes tissue transparen­t, or “clears” it, using a chemical process that removes fat and leaves behind proteins and DNA. The method typically requires fluorescen­t dyes, which can be costly, to stain the tissue samples, but one drawback of those dyes is that the staining tends to degrade over time, making it harder for scientists to gather informatio­n from it. Instead, the researcher­s used coloured, lightabsor­bing dyes which can be used with regular microscopy tools without any noticeable signal loss over time, said Kulkarni. The scientists developed a new device made of components that collective­ly cost just a few hundred dollars: a holographi­c lens-free microscope capable of producing 3D pictures with one-tenth the image data that convention­al scanning optical microscope­s need to do the same thing. The method also allowed the scientists to use tissue samples that were 0.2 millimetre­s thick, more than 20 times thicker than a typical sample - a critical benefit of the new system because producing thinner tissue slices is difficult without sophistica­ted equipment, researcher­s said. This also enables scientists to study a larger sample volume, which could help them to detect abnormalit­ies earlier than they otherwise would.

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 ??  ?? PHOTO: PIXABAY
PHOTO: PIXABAY

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