The Asian Age

Portable malaria diagnostic tool developed

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Los Angeles, May 24: Researcher­s have developed a new portable diagnostic instrument that can screen for all malaria strains within minutes.

The portable optical diagnostic­s system ( PODS) prototype detects a byproduct generated by all species of the malaria parasite.

“With PODS, we can do rapid, broad population screening for malaria in low- resource environmen­ts,” said Andrea Armani from the University of Southern California ( USC) in the US.

“When combined with currently available therapeuti­cs, this could represent a tipping point in the global fight against malaria,” said Armani.

The PODS instrument was designed to solve the challenges limiting current systems, researcher­s said.

To minimise size, weight, and power requiremen­ts without sacrificin­g performanc­e, every aspect was considered, they said.

The current prototype weighs fewer than 4.5kg, is 12 by 10 inches ( the size of a large shoebox) and can be powered by a battery for eight hours.

In addition, PODS was designed to require minimal sample processing and handling, as well as eliminate the need for secondary chemicals with strict storage requiremen­ts.

This makes the device particular­ly suited to lowresourc­e environmen­ts, researcher­s said.

The prototype can analyse an unprocesse­d, whole blood sample in 1015 minutes.

With only 500 microlitre­s of blood ( five to seven drops), it can achieve sensitivit­y levels needed for an early- stage diagnosis.

Malaria- infected mosquitoes infect human hosts with the parasite. Its primary nutrient source is hemoglobin, a component of red blood cells. As the parasite digests hemoglobin, it creates what is known as heme as a byproduct.

“While heme is toxic to both the parasite and its host, the parasite has figured out a ‘ loophole’ around this by aggregatin­g heme into an insoluble nanocrysta­l known as hemozoin,” said Samantha McBirney, a PhD graduate at USC.

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