The Free Press Journal

Now, detect anaemia using your phone

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Biomedical engineers have developed a novel smartphone applicatio­n that could non-invasively detect anaemia without the need for a blood test. The app uses photos of a person's fingernail­s taken on a smartphone to accurately measure how much haemoglobi­n is in their blood.

Fingernail beds are ideal for detection of anaemia because they do not contain melanin – pigment that gives human skin, hair, and eyes their colour – indicating that the test can be valid for people with a variety of skin tones.

“All other ‘point-of-care’ anaemia detection tools require external equipment, and represent trade-offs between invasivene­ss, cost, and accuracy,” said principal investigat­or Wilbur Lam, Associate Professor from Emory University in the US.

“This is a standalone app whose accuracy is on par with currently available point-of-care tests without the need to draw blood,” said Lam. The app is particular­ly helpful for pregnant women, women with abnormal menstrual bleeding, runners/athletes, and patients with chronic anaemia as they can monitor their disease and identify the times when they need to adjust their therapies or receive transfusio­ns, the researcher­s said.

The app, detailed in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, is part of the doctoral work of former biomedical engineerin­g graduate student Rob Mannino, who was motivated to conduct the research by his own experience living with beta-thalassemi­a – an inherited blood disorder that reduces the production of haemoglobi­n.

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