Paper‐Based Wearable Patches for Real‐Time, Quantitative Lactate Monitoring

Author:

Ruggeri Elisabetta1ORCID,Matzeu Giusy1,Vergine Andrea2,De Nicolao Giuseppe3,Omenetto Fiorenzo G.145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Silklab Department of Biomedical Engineering Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

2. Department of Industrial and Information Engineering University of Pavia Pavia 27100 Italy

3. Department of Computer Engineering and Systems Science University of Pavia Pavia 27100 Italy

4. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

5. Department of Physics Tufts University Medford MA 02155 USA

Abstract

AbstractWearable sensors are establishing themselves as options for real‐time continuous health monitoring in health care and wellness. In particular, the use of flexible interfaces that conform to the skin have attracted considerable interest for the extraction of meaningful pathophysiological information through continuous and painless sampling and analysis of biofluids. In contrast, conventional techniques for biomarkers analysis are difficult to adapt to real‐time portable monitoring due to their invasive sampling protocols, biosample preparation and reagent stabilization. Here a shelf‐stable, non‐invasive, paper‐based colorimetric wearable lactate sensor is reported. This sensor exploits the ability of silk to control the concentration, print, and functionally preserve labile transducing biomolecules in the format of a shelf‐stable digital patch for optical readout. This novel approach overcomes major challenges associated with the commercialization of colorimetric wearable sensors (e.g., enzyme thermal instability, narrow sensing range, low sensitivity, and qualitative response) by showing a combination of unprecedented stability (i.e., up to 2 years in refrigerated conditions), wide sensing range, and high sensitivity. Additionally, real‐time quantitative signal readouts are achieved using machine learning‐driven image analysis enabling physiological status evaluation with a simple smartphone camera.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Wiley

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