4.8 Article

Gravitational Sedimentation Induced Blood De lamination for Continuous Plasma Separation on a Microfluidics Chip

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 84, Issue 8, Pages 3780-3786

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac3003616

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National 973 Basic Research Program [2012CB933804]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21035002, 20890020, 21025522]
  3. National Science Fund for Creative Research Groups [21121091]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu province [BK2010009]

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Continuous plasma separation will be greatly helpful for dynamic metabolite monitoring in kinetics research and drug development. In this work, we proposed a continuous on-chip plasma separation method based on the natural aggregating and sedimentation behavior of red blood cells at low shear rate. In this approach, a glass capillary was first used to realize quick and obvious delamination of blood cells from plasma. A novel dual-elbow connector was designed to change the direction of delamination. The blood was finally separated by laminar flow and bifurcation on the microchip. Results demonstrated that the present device can efficiently and stably separate plasma from blood in a continuous means, e.g., in a 4 h separation we did not observe clogging or a trend of clogging. In addition, the present approach can avoid the damage to cells which usually occurs in separation with high shear rate in a microchannel and possible contaminants to plasma. The proposed microchip device is robust, simple, and inexpensive for long time plasma separation with high plasma recovery and less sample consumption. The present work provides an effective tool for metabolite monitoring in pharmacokinetics research and drug development.

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