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Turning your own blood cells into internal sensors

By | August 24, 2012, 10:52 AM PDT

Researchers have converted red blood cells into sensors that can be put back into your bloodstream to circulate and monitor your blood.

These long-lived sensors offering real-time details could be very useful for diabetics, as an example, who must prick themselves with needles in order to get blood to determine their glucose levels.

So Xiaole Shao at the University of Missouri in Columbia and her colleagues built sensors that may one day allow both noninvasive and long-term monitoring of crucial aspects of blood chemistry, Nature News reports.

Near-infrared light can penetrate skin – meaning it can trigger fluorescent molecules circulating in the blood, and this fluorescence can be picked up by an external monitoring device. If the molecule’s fluorescence changes in response to chemical conditions, these changes can also be detected, and you have a sensor.

But fluorescent dyes can be toxic, and they’re quickly filtered out of the body. “The solution we found: encapsulate the sensors in red blood cells,” Shao explains. “In this way the sensors can remain in the body and be protected from the immune response.”

  1. They began with a pH sensor.
  2. They placed red blood cells in a solution that causes them to swell. This opens up a pore in the cell.
  3. If the solution also contains the fluorescent dye, some of this dye will be exchanged with some of the contents of the red blood cell.
  4. The red blood cell can then be resealed and injected back into a patient for monitoring for up to 3 months.

The new sensor cells replace a series of invasive blood samples with a one-time injection. And anything in the blood that can enter the red blood cell can, in theory, be detected using the right dye. This includes glucose.

The work was presented at the American Chemical Society meeting in Philadelphia last week.

[Via Nature News]

Image by Andrew Mason via Flickr

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Janet Fang

About Janet Fang

Janet Fang is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang
Contributing Editor

Janet Fang has written for Nature, Discover and the Point Reyes Light. She is currently a lab technician at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. She holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang

Janet does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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