| Literature DB >> 31989937 |
Lourdes Rivas1, Samuel Dulay1, Sandrine Miserere1, Laura Pla2, Sergio Berdún Marin2, Johanna Parra2, Elisenda Eixarch3, Eduard Gratacós3, Míriam Illa2, Mònica Mir4, Josep Samitier5.
Abstract
Oxygen is vital for energy metabolism in mammals and the variability of the concentration is considered a clinical alert for a wide range of metabolic malfunctions in medicine. In this article, we describe the development and application of a micro-needle implantable platinum-based electrochemical sensor for measuring partial pressure of oxygen in intramuscular tissue (in-vivo) and vascular blood (ex-vivo). The Pt-Nafion® sensor was characterized morphological and electrochemically showing a higher sensitivity of -2.496 nA/mmHg (-1.495 nA/μM) when comparing with its bare counterpart. Our sensor was able to discriminate states with different oxygen partial pressures (pO2) for ex-vivo (blood) following the same trend of the commercial gas analyzer used as standard. For in-vivo (intramuscular) experiments, since there is not a gold standard for measuring pO2 in tissue, it was not possible to correlate the obtained currents with the pO2 in tissue. However, our sensor was able to detect clear statistical differences of O2 between hyperoxia and hypoxia states in tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Hypoxia; Implantable sensor; In-vivo test; Ischemia; Nafion; Oxygen sensor
Year: 2020 PMID: 31989937 DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2020.112028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosens Bioelectron ISSN: 0956-5663 Impact factor: 10.618