PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New tech lets cholesterol-tracking smartphone users take lifesaving selfies

2013-12-14
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Melissa Osgood
mmo59@cornell.edu
607-255-2059
Cornell University
New tech lets cholesterol-tracking smartphone users take lifesaving selfies ITHACA, N.Y. – With a new smartphone device, you can now take an accurate iPhone camera selfie that could save your life – it reads your cholesterol level in about a minute.

Forget those clumsy, complicated, home cholesterol-testing devices. Cornell engineers have created the Smartphone Cholesterol Application for Rapid Diagnostics, or "smartCARD," which employs your smartphone's camera to read your cholesterol level.

"Smartphones have the potential to address health issues by eliminating the need for specialized equipment," said David Erickson, Cornell associate professor of mechanical engineering and senior author on a new peer-reviewed study. Thanks to advanced, sophisticated camera technology, Erickson and his colleagues have created a smartphone accessory that optically detects biomarkers in a drop of blood, sweat or saliva. The new application then discerns the results using color analysis.

When a user puts a drop of blood on the cholesterol test strip, it processes the blood through separation steps and chemical reactions. The strip is then ready for colorimetric analysis by the smartphone application.

The smartCARD accessory – which looks somewhat like a smartphone credit card reader – clamps over the phone's camera. Its built-in flash provides uniform, diffused light to illuminate the test strip that fits into the smartCARD reader. The application in the phone calibrates the hue saturation to the image's color values on the cholesterol test strip, and the results appear on your phone.

Currently, the test measures total cholesterol. The Erickson lab is working to break out those numbers in LDL ("bad" cholesterol), HDL ("good" cholesterol) and triglyceride measurements. The lab is also working on detecting vitamin D levels, and has previously demonstrated smartphone tests for periodontitis and sweat electrolyte levels.

"By 2016, there will be an estimated 260 million smartphones in use in the United States. Smartphones are ubiquitous," said Erickson, adding that although smartCARD is ready to be brought to market immediately, he is optimistic that it will have even more its advanced capabilities in less than a year. "Mobil health is increasing at an incredible rate," he concluded. "It's the next big thing."

The article, "Cholesterol Testing on a Smartphone," appeared online in the journal Lab on a Chip, is co-authored by Vlad Oncescu and Matthew Mancuso, Cornell graduate students in the field of engineering. The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Engineering Research Council of Canada and Cornell's David R. Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future.

###

Cornell University has television and ISDN radio studios available for media interviews.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pilot study finds ways to better screen and recover guns from domestic violence offenders

2013-12-14
Pilot study finds ways to better screen and recover guns from domestic violence offenders (SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — More intensive screening to identify firearm owners among individuals who are subject to domestic violence restraining ...

Nutrition report cards receive high marks in pilot program

2013-12-14
Nutrition report cards receive high marks in pilot program ITHACA, N.Y. – Parents receiving academic report cards throughout the school year is commonplace, but a new Cornell University study shows that for healthier nutrition, parents should opt to receive a nutrition ...

No 2 people smell the same

2013-12-14
No 2 people smell the same With nearly a million variations on 400 smell receptors, everyone senses smell differently DURHAM, NC -- A difference at the smallest level of DNA -- one amino acid on one gene -- can determine whether you find a given smell pleasant. A ...

Ethanol blends carry hidden risk

2013-12-14
Ethanol blends carry hidden risk Rice University study finds spills of fuel with more ethanol could endanger people, buildings HOUSTON – (Dec. 12, 2013) – Blending more ethanol into fuel to cut air pollution from vehicles carries a hidden risk that toxic or even explosive gases ...

Strobe glasses improve hockey players' performance

2013-12-14
Strobe glasses improve hockey players' performance Intermittent vision of the action can improve brain's visual perception DURHAM, N.C. -- Professional hockey players who trained with special eyewear that only allowed them to see action intermittently showed significant ...

Swirls in remnants of big bang may hold clues to universe's infancy

2013-12-14
Swirls in remnants of big bang may hold clues to universe's infancy South Pole Telescope scientists have detected for the first time a subtle distortion in the oldest light in the universe, which may help reveal secrets about the earliest moments in the universe's ...

UI researcher studies evolution on the molecular level

2013-12-14
UI researcher studies evolution on the molecular level Findings may be useful in design of future drugs and catalysts The theory of evolution suggests that present-day organisms evolved from earlier life forms. At the molecular level, evolution reshaped some of ...

Scientists improve human self-control through electrical brain stimulation

2013-12-13
Scientists improve human self-control through electrical brain stimulation If you have ever said or done the wrong thing at the wrong time, you should read this. Neuroscientists at The University of Texas Health Science Center ...

UCLA stem cell scientists first to track joint cartilage development in humans

2013-12-13
UCLA stem cell scientists first to track joint cartilage development in humans Stem cell researchers from UCLA have published the first study to identify the origin cells and track the early development of human articular cartilage, providing what ...

Researchers hope newly discovered gene interaction could lead to novel cancer therapies

2013-12-13
Researchers hope newly discovered gene interaction could lead to novel cancer therapies Scientists from Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center have revealed how two genes interact to kill a wide range of cancer cells. Originally discovered ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

How your DNA reveals your true age with astonishing accuracy

First electronic–photonic quantum chip created in commercial foundry

High-performance scientific computing can compute molecule ground-state energy

Cryo-electron microscopy – Reaction cycle of an enzyme for CO2 fixation decoded

Feeling more extroverted? Study finds you may have learned how to handle daily stress better

Kindness counts—even to a five-day-old baby

Endocrine Society guideline calls for increased screening for common cause of high blood pressure

Macromolecular gene delivery systems: advancing non-viral therapeutics with synthetic and natural polymers

Study finds political instability, environmental conditions, and social inequality accelerate aging

New insights into malaria: Proteins in the blood can reveal the severity of the disease

Delayed hypertension diagnosis and its association with cardiovascular treatment and outcomes

GLP-1 receptor agonists in idiopathic intracranial hypertension

Integrating diet and physical activity when prescribing GLP-1s—lifestyle factors remain crucial

More research needed to explore potential racial, gender and socioeconomic differences in stroke treatment and recovery

Prostate cancer cells survive treatment by storing fat in low oxygen conditions

Novel open-source diagnostic tool offers affordable, reliable pathogen detection for resource-limited settings

Answers to existence of alien life might be found in Earth’s deep-sea volcanoes

SwRI evaluates effects of hydrogen and natural gas blends on storage tanks

New study reveals widespread and overlooked flooding across NC

In a competitive world, mean leaders look smart

New study highlights how perceived economic inequality undermines individual well-being across 71 countries

The heat survival code of plants: The hidden mechanism of RNA splicing uncovered

How plants survive drought: The unsuspected role of myosin XI in guard cells

Pusan National University researchers unveil game-changing UV-fueled shape-shifting and shape-fixing smart materials

Landmark study in cell introduces first-of-its-kind optogenetic screening platform for drug discovery

Measuring air pollutants in real time: ERC proof of concept grant for TU Graz physicist

How new genes get switched on

Regrowing hearing cells: New gene functions discovered in zebrafish offer clues for future hearing loss treatments

Air pollution cuts in East Asia likely accelerated global warming

Fighting leukemia by breaking a hidden cell loop

[Press-News.org] New tech lets cholesterol-tracking smartphone users take lifesaving selfies