Getting under your skin for better health – Technology Org

The next frontier of continuous health monitoring could be skin deep. Testing of interstitial fluid could one day replace blood work for health and wellness.

Biomedical engineers at the University of Cincinnati say interstitial fluid, the watery fluid between and around cells, tissues and organs in the body, could provide an excellent medium for early disease diagnosis or long-term health monitoring.

A prototype of a device that can measure interstitial fluid uses microneedles.

A prototype of a device that can measure interstitial fluid uses microneedles. Image credit: Mark Friedel

A US National Science Foundation-supported paper published in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering outlines the potential advantages and technological challenges of using interstitial fluid. The researchers see it as a valuable diagnostic fluid because of continuous access. With blood, they said, you can’t easily take continuous readings.

Researchers are looking for alternatives to monitor a person’s health and wellness. Blood is the gold standard for health monitoring.

But people also have liters of interstitial fluid that makes up as much as 15% of their body weight. Interstitial fluid contains many chemicals in the same proportions as blood, offering a potential alternative to costly and time-consuming lab work.

University of Cincinnati professor Jason Heikenfeld studies wearable technology in his Novel Devices Lab.

University of Cincinnati professor Jason Heikenfeld studies wearable technology in his Novel Devices Lab. Image credit: Andrew Higley/UC

The study outlined the ways doctors can sample interstitial fluid, from applying suction to the skin to spreading microdialysis. Researchers in Jason Heikenfeld’s lab at the University of Cincinnati are developing sensors to measure hormones and other chemicals in interstitial fluid. They use microneedles less than 1 millimeter in length that pierce the skin through a tiny patch.

They said that interstitial fluid holds promise for health monitoring through wearable technology. This could help doctors track the efficacy of drugs to ensure proper dosage or provide early diagnosis of illness by monitoring the immune system.

“One day,” said Usha Varshney, a program director in NSF’s Directorate for Engineering, “continuous monitoring of health will be performed by a wearable skin device that will replace bloodwork with testing of interstitial fluid.”

Source: NSF

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