4.8 Article

Skin-interfaced microfluidic system with personalized sweating rate and sweat chloride analytics for sports science applications

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 6, Issue 50, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abe3929

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Funding

  1. Gatorade Sports Science Institute, a division of PepsiCo Inc.
  2. Querrey Simpson Institute for Bioelectronics at Northwestern University

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Advanced capabilities in noninvasive, in situ monitoring of sweating rate and sweat electrolyte losses could enable real-time personalized fluid-electrolyte intake recommendations. Established sweat analysis techniques using absorbent patches require post-collection harvesting and benchtop analysis of sweat and are thus impractical for ambulatory use. Here, we introduce a skin-interfaced wearable microfluidic device and smartphone image processing platform that enable analysis of regional sweating rate and sweat chloride concentration ([CI-]). Systematic studies (n = 312 athletes) establish significant correlations for regional sweating rate and sweat [CI-] in a controlled environment and during competitive sports under varying environmental conditions. The regional sweating rate and sweat [CI-] results serve as inputs to algorithms implemented on a smartphone software application that predicts whole-body sweating rate and sweat [CI-]. This low-cost wearable sensing approach could improve the accessibility of physiological insights available to sports scientists, practitioners, and athletes to inform hydration strategies in real-world ambulatory settings.

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