4.6 Review

Magnetic frequency mixing technological advances for the practical improvement of point-of-care testing

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 119, Issue 2, Pages 347-360

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.28005

Keywords

frequency mixing technology (FMT); lateral flow assay (LFA); magnetic imaging; magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs); point-of-care testing (POCT)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32171373]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017FYA0205303, 2017YFA0205301]

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Nanomaterials, especially superparamagnetic nanomaterials, are playing essential roles in point-of-care testing due to their unique properties. Frequency mixing technology (FMT) is an emerging detection technique with high potential in biomedical quantitative detection. FMT sensors have advantages in robust, ultrasensitive biosensing but also face challenges in future development.
Nanomaterials, especially superparamagnetic nanomaterials, have recently played essential roles in point-of-care testing due to their intrinsic magnetic, electrochemical, and optical properties. The inherent superparamagnetism of magnetic nanoparticles makes them highly sensitive for quantitative detection. Among the various magnetic detection technologies, frequency mixing technology (FMT) technology is an emerging detection technique in the nanomedical field. FMT sensors have high potential for development in the field of biomedical quantitative detection due to their simple structure, and they are not limited to the materials used. In particular, they can be applied for large-scale disease screening, early tumor marker detection, and low-dose drug detection. This review summarizes the principles of FMT and recent advances in the fields of immunoadsorption, lateral flow assay detection, magnetic imaging, and magnetic nanoparticles recognition. The advantages and limitations of FMT sensors for robust, ultrasensitive biosensing are highlighted. Finally, the future requirements and challenges in the development of this technology are described. This review provides further insights for researchers to inspire the future development of FMT by integration into biosensing and devices with a broad field of applications in analytical sensing and clinical usage.

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