| Literature DB >> 26852676 |
Prashanth Makaram1, Dawn Owens2, Juan Aceros3.
Abstract
Blood glucose monitoring is considered the gold standard for diabetes diagnostics and self-monitoring. However, the underlying process is invasive and highly uncomfortable for patients. Furthermore, the process must be completed several times a day to successfully manage the disease, which greatly contributes to the massive need for non-invasive monitoring options. Human serums, such as saliva, sweat, breath, urine and tears, contain traces of glucose and are easily accessible. Therefore, they allow minimal to non-invasive glucose monitoring, making them attractive alternatives to blood measurements. Numerous developments regarding noninvasive glucose detection techniques have taken place over the years, but recently, they have gained recognition as viable alternatives, due to the advent of nanotechnology-based sensors. Such sensors are optimal for testing the amount of glucose in serums other than blood thanks to their enhanced sensitivity and selectivity ranges, in addition to their size and compatibility with electronic circuitry. These nanotechnology approaches are rapidly evolving, and new techniques are constantly emerging. Hence, this manuscript aims to review current and future nanomaterial-based technologies utilizing saliva, sweat, breath and tears as a diagnostic medium for diabetes monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: blood; breath; diabetes; glucose; monitoring; nano-material; non-invasive; saliva; sensing; sweat; tears; urine
Year: 2014 PMID: 26852676 PMCID: PMC4665544 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics4020027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
A list of the most studied nano-materials for detecting typical biomarkers and the relevant concentrations in various mediums. CNT, carbon nanotube; NP, nanoparticle.
| Medium | Biomarkers | Typical Concentrations | Most Studied Materials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood | Glucose | 2–30 mM [ | ZnO [ |
| Urine | Glucose | 2.78–5.5 mM [ | Metal NP [ |
| Saliva | Glucose | 0.008–0.21 mM [ | Polymer [ |
| Sweat | Glucose | 0.277–1.11 mM [ | Polymer [ |
| Tears | Glucose | 0.1–0.6 mM [ | Polymer [ |
| Breath | Acetone | 21–0.5 ppm [ | Polymer [ |
The advantages and disadvantages of using various media in diabetes diagnosis.
| Media | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
|
| Well-established analytical technique
| Invasive
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| Non-invasive and painless
| Low accuracy
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| Non-invasive and painless
| Low concentration levels
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| Easy sample collection
| High calibration times
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| Highly accessible
| Poor correlation with blood glucose level
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| Non-invasive and painless | Results and analysis influenced by multiple confounding factors
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