Biochip helps physicians detecting blood poisoning quickly

02 Dec 2011

1
Speed can save lives - especially in the case of blood poisoning. The more quickly and directly doctors recognise and treat sepsis, the greater the patient's chances of survival. With the help of a new biochip, physicians will now be able to analyse blood within their own practice.
 
Is the patient suffering from blood poisoning? To answer this question, the doctor draws a blood sample and sends it to a central laboratory for testing. This takes up valuable time, which could cost the patient his life. In future, physicians will be able to analyse blood there and then and have the results within twenty minutes. This is made possible by a biochip, developed by scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for Physical Measurement Techniques IPM in Freiburg.
 
''To analyse the biochip we have also designed a fully automatic device to carry out all the examination steps,'' explains Dr Albrecht Brandenburg, group manager at the IPM. ''All the doctor has to do is place the sample in the apparatus and wait for the results.''
 
Meanwhile, within the device there's plenty going on: it starts by preparing the blood sample. Red blood cells are separated from the blood and the plasma that remains is guided onto the biochip. When patients are suffering from sepsis, their immune system reacts by producing certain proteins. The biochip uses these in its diagnosis: there are antibodies positioned on the chip which fit these proteins like a key fits a lock.
 
If the proteins are present in the blood, the antibodies fish them out of the fluid and bind them to the chip. But how does the apparatus know if proteins have been caught?
 
''The chip is rinsed with a solution containing the appropriate antibodies, which have in turn been marked with a fluorescent dye,'' explains IPM scientist Dr Manuel Kemmler. ''These bind to the proteins - meaning antibodies, protein and marked antibodies are all firmly linked to each other and to the chip's surface. When the chip is illuminated, the dye lights up.''
 
The apparatus sees lots of little illuminated dots that show the protein was in the blood. If the patient is healthy, however, the chip remains dark.
 
The researchers can even test for different proteins at the same time in one cycle. This is done by placing various different catcher molecules on the chip, to which specific molecules in the blood attach themselves. A cunning selection of proven protein markers allows the scientists to obtain additional important information about the severity and cause of the illness.
 
Together with colleagues from a university hospital, the researchers have already successfully tested prototypes of the device and biochip. Each biochip can only be used once - so they have to be affordable.
 
''We predict that in the long run, with production on a large enough scale, each chip will cost no more than one Euro,'' says Brandenburg.
 
There are various possible applications: other conditions such as heart attacks or cancers can also be investigated this way. What's more, the chip facilitates doping and urine testing as well as the quality assessment of foodstuffs.

Latest articles

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom