Giardia purification from fecal samples using rigid spiral inertial microfluidics

Author:

Ding Lin1,Razavi Bazaz Sajad1ORCID,Hall Timothy2,Vesey Graham2,Ebrahimi Warkiani Majid13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Engineering, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2007, Australia

2. BioPoint Pty. Ltd, Sydney, NSW 2113, Australia

3. Institute of Molecular Medicine, Sechenov University, Moscow 119991, Russia

Abstract

Giardia is one of the most common waterborne pathogens causing around 200 × 106 diarrheal infections annually. It is of great interest to microbiological research as it is among the oldest known eukaryotic cells. Purifying Giardia from fecal samples for both research and diagnostic purposes presents one of the most difficult challenges. Traditional purification methods rely on density gradient centrifugation, membrane-based filtration, and sedimentation methods, which suffer from low recovery rates, high costs, and poor efficiency. Here, we report on the use of microfluidics to purify Giardia cysts from mouse feces. We propose a rigid spiral microfluidic device with a trapezoidal cross section to effectively separate Giardia from surrounding debris. Our characterizations reveal that the recovery rate is concentration-dependent, and our proposed device can achieve recovery rates as high as 75% with 0.75 ml/min throughput. Moreover, this device can purify Giardia from extremely turbid samples to a level where cysts are visually distinguishable with just one round of purification. This highly scalable and versatile 3D printed microfluidic device is then capable of further purifying or enhancing the recovery rate of the samples by recirculation. This device also has the potential to purify other gastrointestinal pathogens of similar size, and throughput can be significantly increased by parallelization.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes,Colloid and Surface Chemistry,Biomedical Engineering

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