4.5 Article

Comment on: Dissolved oxygen sensing characteristics of plastic optical fiber coated with hydrogel film - The wider context of fibre optic oxygen sensing

Journal

OPTICAL FIBER TECHNOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yofte.2021.102810

Keywords

Oxygen; Optics and photonics; Spectrometry; Fluorescence; Hydrogels

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A recently published article introduces a novel plastic optical fibre oxygen sensor coated with a hydrogel film for measuring dissolved oxygen through luminescence quenching. However, the sensor contains toxic ruthenium, making it unsafe for clinical applications. Pre-clinical fibre optic oxygen sensors using platinum porphyrin have been overlooked in the article.
A recently published article by Bian et al. (2021) presents a novel plastic optical fibre coated with hydrogel film to measure dissolved oxygen via luminescence quenching. The article concludes that The sensor with biocompatible material is expected to be applied to the monitor of dissolved oxygen in the domain of biomedicine. However, the oxygen sensor presented contains ruthenium, a toxic material that is considered unsafe for clinical applications. It is unclear whether the hydrogel film coating may be sufficient to prevent direct contact between ruthenium and human tissue in clinical applications. However, platinum porphyrin has been used in fibre optic oxygen sensors in pre-clinical applications. This Comment article provides a brief overview of some platinum porphyrin-based fibre optic oxygen sensors that, despite an advanced degree of maturity and biocompatibility, were overlooked in the recently published article.

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