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Hybrid Technologies Combining Solid-State Sensors and Paper/Fabric Fluidics for Wearable Analytical Devices

期刊

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
卷 11, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios11090303

关键词

wearables; paper microfluidics; fabric microfluidics; solid-state sensors; electrochemical (bio)sensor; clinical analysis

资金

  1. SNF-SINERGIA (NffiCRSII5_177255), Switzerland

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The development of diagnostic tools for measuring a wide spectrum of target analytes has grown significantly in the last decades. Wearable devices that can provide real-time analysis of biofluids, particularly sweat, have gained attention for various applications. While current devices mainly offer discrete qualitative results, there is a high demand for quantitative biomarker analysis, leading to research on fluidic elements and sensor architectures.
The development of diagnostic tools for measuring a wide spectrum of target analytes, from biomarkers to other biochemical parameters in biological fluids, has experienced a significant growth in the last decades, with a good number of such tools entering the market. Recently, a clear focus has been put on miniaturized wearable devices, which offer powerful capabilities for real-time and continuous analysis of biofluids, mainly sweat, and can be used in athletics, consumer wellness, military, and healthcare applications. Sweat is an attractive biofluid in which different biomarkers could be noninvasively measured to provide rapid information about the physical state of an individual. Wearable devices reported so far often provide discrete (single) measurements of the target analytes, most of them in the form of a yes/no qualitative response. However, quantitative biomarker analysis over certain periods of time is highly demanded for many applications such as the practice of sports or the precise control of the patient status in hospital settings. For this, a feasible combination of fluidic elements and sensor architectures has been sought. In this regard, this paper shows a concise overview of analytical tools based on the use of capillary-driven fluidics taking place on paper or fabric devices integrated with solid-state sensors fabricated by thick film technologies. The main advantages and limitations of the current technologies are pointed out together with the progress towards the development of functional devices. Those approaches reported in the last decade are examined in detail.

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