(Press-News.org) Biomedical engineers at UC Davis have developed a microfluidic chip to test for latent tuberculosis. They hope the test will be cheaper, faster and more reliable than current testing for the disease.
"Our assay is cheaper, reusable, and gives results in real time," said Ying Liu, a research specialist working with Professor Alexander Revzin in the UC Davis Department of Biomedical Engineering.
The team has already conducted testing of blood samples from patients in China and the United States.
About one-third of the world's population is infected with the bacteria that cause tuberculosis, a disease that kills an estimated 1.5 million people worldwide every year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Most infected people have latent TB, in which the bacteria are kept in check by the immune system. Patients become sick only when the immune system is compromised, enabling the bacteria to become active. People with HIV are at especially high risk.
Current tests for latent TB are based on detecting interferon-gamma, a disease-fighting chemical made by cells of the immune system. Commercially available tests require sending samples to a lab, and can be used just once.
Liu and Revzin used a novel approach: They coated a gold wafer with short pieces of a single-stranded DNA segment known to stick specifically to interferon-gamma. They then mounted the wafer in a chip that has tiny channels for blood samples. If interferon-gamma is present in a blood sample, it sticks to the DNA, triggering an electrical signal that can be read by a clinician.
"If you see that the interferon-gamma level is high, you can diagnose latent TB," Liu said.
The researchers plan to refine the system so that the microfluidic sensor and electronic readout are integrated on a single chip.
A patent application has been filed for the technology, and the researchers hope the test can be commercialized after FDA approval. The work was supported by the National Science Foundation.
INFORMATION:
New TB test promises to be cheap and fast
2012-05-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
DATING STRATEGY: Mate1.com Advises Members to Consider Timing
2012-05-23
According to an article from TechNewsDaily, recent Match.com survey results showed that key moments in a relationship are happening sooner rather than later. Researchers from The Kinsey Institute and the Institute for Evolutionary Studies at Binghamton University helped lead the study for Match.com. After looking at the findings, Mate1.com, an online dating service, agreed that timing is vital, especially in today's singles scene where daters are connecting constantly
The survey addressed key moments in the various stages of a relationship, starting with the post-date ...
Newly discovered breast milk antibodies help neutralize HIV
2012-05-23
DURHAM, N.C. – Antibodies that help to stop the HIV virus have been found in breast milk. Researchers at Duke University Medical Center isolated the antibodies from immune cells called B cells in the breast milk of infected mothers in Malawi, and showed that the B cells in breast milk can generate neutralizing antibodies that may inhibit the virus that causes AIDS.
HIV-1 can be transmitted from mother to child via breastfeeding, posing a challenge for safe infant feeding practices in areas of high HIV-1 prevalence. But only one in 10 HIV-infected nursing mothers is known ...
CONSUMER ALERT: ConsignPro Contributes to Parents' Ability to Stretch Budgets
2012-05-23
While it is hardly unusual for families to live on tight budgets, many families have found those budgets growing even tighter in recent years. After an extended period of economic tumult, recovery is beginning to happen slowly but surely--just as gasoline prices see major spikes. All of these factors have left parents and families looking to cut costs like never before, and a new report highlights one way in which families are doing just that--by purchasing clothing not from designer clothing boutiques or name-brand stores, but from consignment stores. Families across the ...
Track Atlantic bluefin tuna to learn migration, habitat secrets
2012-05-23
AMHERST, Mass. – New fish-tagging studies of young bluefin tuna in Atlantic waters off New England by researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst are offering the first fishery-independent, year-round data on dispersal patterns and habitat use for the popular game fish. The availability of miniaturized pop-up satellite tags suitable for smaller (two- to five-year-old) fish helped make the research possible.
Fisheries oceanographer Molly Lutcavage and lead author Benjamin Galuardi say the work shows that scientists now have tools to directly observe bluefin ...
Total Mortgage Expands Headquarters to Accommodate Growth
2012-05-23
Total Mortgage Services, LLC, a leading national mortgage lender, announced an expansion of its Milford, CT headquarters. Total Mortgage has added an additional two thousand square-foot of office space which will house the company's senior leadership. The new space is part of the same building complex where Total Mortgage's origination and operation centers are located. Total Mortgage now occupies more than 10,000 square feet of office space at its headquarters on West Main Street in Milford, CT as well as other regional offices.
"We have been part of the City of ...
Trumpet Marketing Announces Local Initiative in Celebration of National Small Business Week!
2012-05-23
Trumpet Marketing, a Maryland-based graphic design and Internet marketing company has launched a new initiative to assist local small businesses with developing new business through Internet mediums including websites, blogs and social media.
On Monday, President, Barack Obama proclaimed this week as National Small Business Week. He has called upon all us to recognize the contributions of small businesses citing the importance of small businesses to the competitiveness of the American economy. "We couldn't agree more!" says Jim Williams, president of Trumpet ...
Social media and the Internet allowed young Arab women to play a central role in the Arab Spring
2012-05-23
This press release is available in French. Over the course of 2011's momentous Arab Spring uprisings, young women in Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, Bahrain and Yemen used social media and cyberactivism to carve out central roles in the revolutionary struggles under way in their countries, according to a new study commissioned by Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy.
The study, "Unveiling the Revolutionaries: Cyberactivism and Women's Role in the Arab Uprisings," explores the activism of several key figures, including Egypt's Esraa Abdel Fattah, who became widely ...
Internet politics, policies have rapidly become integral to US international affairs
2012-05-23
Internet governance policy has rapidly risen from a relatively marginal issue for the United States' foreign policy establishment to a significant component of the country's international affairs and national security strategy, according to a new paper from Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy.
The study, "From Tunis to Tunis: Considering the Planks of U.S. International Cyber Policy 2005-2011," investigates how and why the Internet, the wider cyberspace and information technology have come to matter a great deal to the departments of Defense and State ...
Refining fire behavior modeling
2012-05-23
ASHEVILLE, NC -- Research by USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station biometrician Bernie Parresol takes center stage in a special issue of the journal Forest Ecology and Management due out in June. Parresol is lead author of two of the five articles—and co-author of two more—in an issue that focuses on methods that incorporate fine-scale data into the tools Southeastern forest managers use to assess wildfire potential and plan mitigation treatments.
Most fire behavior analyses rely on sparse plot inventories and data from satellites, and often do not address the ...
Sequence it…and they will come!
2012-05-23
Rapid DNA sequencing may soon become a routine part of each individual's medical record, providing enormous information previously sequestered in the human genome's 3 billion nucleotide bases. This week's NEWSFOCUS section of the journal Science describes recent advances in sequencing technology.
Stuart Lindsay, director of the Biodesign Institute's Center for Single Molecule Biophysics is on the forefront of this research, having successfully addressed a central stumbling block in nanopore sequencing—reading single nucleotide bases in a DNA chain. Lindsay's latest experimental ...