4.7 Article

High-yield paper-based quantitative blood separation system

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 18, Issue 24, Pages 3865-3871

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8lc00717a

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health Award [1R01EB021331]
  2. National Science Foundation Award [1343058]
  3. Micronutrient Initiative

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Interest in developing paper-based devices for point-of-care diagnostics in resource-limited settings has risen remarkably in recent decades. In this paper, we demonstrate what we refer to as high yield passive rrythrocyte removal (HYPER) technology, which utilizes capillary forces in a unique cross-flow filtration for the separation of whole blood with performance comparable to centrifuges. As we will demonstrate, state-of-the-art passive blood separation methods implemented in paper-based systems exhibit rapid blood cell clogging on the filtration media or serum outlet and yield only about 10-30% of the total serum present in the sample. Our innovation results from the inclusion of a differentiation pad, which exploits hydrodynamic effects to reduce the formation of a fouling layer on the blood filtration membrane resulting in more than 60% serum yield with undiluted whole blood as direct input. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the HYPER technology we implement it in a lateral flow system and demonstrate the accurate quantification of vitamin A and iron levels in whole blood samples in 15 minutes.

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