• Microchips capable of detecting and diagnosing disseases

    From Jan Panteltje@21:1/5 to All on Tue Dec 17 04:26:05 2024
    Microchips capable of detecting and diagnosing diseases
    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/12/241216184736.htm
    Source:
    NYU Tandon School of Engineering
    Summary:
    Researchers have developed microchips using field-effect transistors
    that can detect multiple diseases from a single air sample with high
    sensitivity.
    The technology enables rapid testing and could lead to portable diagnostic
    devices for home and medical use.

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  • From Bill Sloman@21:1/5 to Jan Panteltje on Tue Dec 17 18:49:21 2024
    On 17/12/2024 3:26 pm, Jan Panteltje wrote:
    Microchips capable of detecting and diagnosing diseases
    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/12/241216184736.htm
    Source:
    NYU Tandon School of Engineering
    Summary:
    Researchers have developed microchips using field-effect transistors
    that can detect multiple diseases from a single air sample with high
    sensitivity.
    The technology enables rapid testing and could lead to portable diagnostic
    devices for home and medical use.

    This is misleading write-up. What they seem to be talking about is
    sticking individual monoclonal antibody molecules onto a molecule-sized
    FET gate, and detecting the change in gate voltage after the antibody
    has latched onto molecule to which it is a specific antibody.

    One transistor can only detect one sort of disease molecule, so if you
    want to detect multiple diseases you need at least one transistor per
    disease.

    If you want to use the detector more than once, you have to be able to
    get the antibody to unlatch from the molecule that it has detected and
    revert to a state where it can detect another.

    The IASys biosensor unit that I worked on used a disposable sensor to
    get around this. We shone a laser at it to find out if the monoclonal
    antibody had latched its target molecule. We didn't have to throw out
    the laser with the sensor. The FET gate is a bit closer to the
    monoclonal antibody.

    --
    Bill Sloman, Sydney

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