4.8 Article

Wearable microneedle array-based sensor for transdermal monitoring of pH levels in interstitial fluid

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 222, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2022.114955

Keywords

Interstitial fluid; Potentiometry; pH sensor; Polymeric microneedle arrays; Electrochemical sensors; Polyaniline; Microfabrication; Transdermal sensing

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Microneedle-based wearable sensors provide an alternative approach for health monitoring and disease diagnostics by detecting pH levels in the skin interstitial fluid. This technology significantly contributes to the advancement of wearable sensors, simplifies the manufacturing process, and improves cost-effectiveness.
Microneedle-based wearable sensors offer an alternative approach to traditional invasive blood-based health monitoring and disease diagnostics techniques. Instead of blood, microneedle-based sensors target the skin interstitial fluid (ISF), in which the biomarker type and concentration profile resemble the one found in the blood. However, unlike blood, interstitial fluid does not have the same pH-buffering capacity causing deviation of pH levels from the physiological range. Information about the skin ISF pH levels can be used as a biomarker for a wide range of pathophysiological conditions and as a marker for the calibration of a wearable sensor. The ISF pH can significantly affect the detection accuracy of other biomarkers as it influences enzyme activity, aptamer affinity, and antibody-antigen interaction. Herein, we report the fabrication of a high-density polymeric microneedle array-based (PMNA) sensing patch and its optimization for the potentiometric transdermal moni-toring of pH levels in ISF. The wearable sensor utilizes a polyaniline-coated PMNA having a density of-10,000 microneedles per cm2, containing individual microneedles with a height of-250 mu m, and a tip diameter of-2 mu m. To prevent interference from other body fluids like sweat, an insulating layer is deposited at the base of the PMNA. The wearable pH sensor operates from pH 4.0 to 8.6 with a sensitivity of 62.9 mV per pH unit and an accuracy of +/- 0.036 pH units. Furthermore, testing on a mouse demonstrates the ability of the PMNA to provide a real-time reading of the transdermal pH values. This microneedle-based system will significantly contribute to advancing transdermal wearable sensors technology, simplifying the fabrication process, and improving the cost-effectiveness of such devices.

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