By IANS,
Toronto : An “Electronic Mosquito” could replace invasive methods of drawing blood samples from diabetics to check glucose levels.
The common method of drawing blood from fingertips and using glucose testing strips and metres can be painful, inconvenient and time-consuming.
Now, electrical engineers at the Schulich School of Engineering at the University of Calgary have patented a device called the Electronic Mosquito or e-Mosquito, a patch approximately the size of a deck of cards which contains four micro-needles that “bite” sequentially at programmed intervals.
The needles are electronically controlled to penetrate the skin deep enough to draw blood from a capillary, but not deep enough to hit a nerve, which means patients would experience little or no pain. The patch could be worn anywhere on the body where it could obtain accurate readings of capillary blood.
A sensor in each cell of the e-Mosquito measures sugar levels in the blood. This data can then be sent wirelessly to a remote device such a computer or a monitoring instrument worn on the wrist.
The system could even be connected to an alarm to alert patients or doctors when blood sugar levels enter the danger zone.
“This is a dramatic improvement over manual poking, particularly for children and elderly patients,” said Martin Mintchev, director of the Low Frequency Instrumentation Lab at the Schulich School of Engineering.
“Our approach is radically different and offers a reliable, repeatable solution with the minor inconvenience of wearing something similar to an adhesive bandage.”
Mintchev spent three years designing the e-Mosquito along with Karan Kaler, director of the Schulich School’s Bio-Micro Electromechanical Systems (MEMS) Lab.
Their next step is to make the components of the e-Mosquito smaller to fit more needles on the patch. Currently, there are four needles, so the patch would need to be changed at least once a day, said a Calgary release.
Adding more needles would allow patients to wear the patch for longer periods of time or test their blood more frequently, even while they’re asleep.
Diabetes affects 246 million people worldwide.