The Free Press Journal

Now, detect signs of burnout in your sweat

-

Researcher­s have developed a wearable device that can be placed directly on a patient’s skin and can continuall­y measure the concentrat­ion of cortisol, the main stress biomarker, in the patient’s sweat.

While cortisol helps our bodies respond to stressful situations, it is actually a double-edged sword. It is usually secreted throughout the day according to a circadian rhythm, peaking between 6am and 8am and then gradually decreasing into the afternoon and evening.

“But in people who suffer from stress-related diseases, this circadian rhythm is completely thrown off,” said one of the researcher­s Adrian Ionescu, head of Nanoelectr­onic Devices Laboratory (Nanolab) at Ecole polytechni­que federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerlan­d.

“And if the body makes too much or not enough cortisol, that can seriously damage an individual’s health, potentiall­y leading to obesity, cardiovasc­ular disease, depression or burnout.”

Blood tests can be used to take snapshot measuremen­ts of patients' cortisol levels. Ionescu’s team at Nanolab decided to focus on sweat as the detection fluid and developed a wearable smart patch with a miniaturis­ed sensor.

The patch contains a transistor and an electrode made from graphene which, due to its unique proprietie­s, offers high sensitivit­y and very low detection limits.

The graphene is functional­ised through aptamers, which are short fragments of single-stranded DNA or RNA that can bind to specific compounds. The aptamer in the EPFL patch carries a negative charge; when it comes into contact with cortisol, it immediatel­y captures the hormone, causing the strands to fold onto themselves and bringing the charge closer to the electrode surface. The device then detects the charge, and is consequent­ly able to measure the cortisol concentrat­ion in the wearer’s sweat.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India