They
are looking to produce a testing kit that would cost clinics and hospitals
around US$30 and take about 15 minutes to analyze blood samples for a key
dengue protein. Photo: Reuters
|
Brazilian scientists have
developed a biosensor that can quickly detect dengue and could help create a
cheap tool to diagnose the painful mosquito-borne virus that infects millions
each year.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
They
are looking to produce a testing kit that would cost clinics and hospitals
around US$30 and take about 15 minutes to analyze blood samples for a key
dengue protein, said Cleverton Luiz Pirich, a researcher at the Federal
University of ParanĂ¡.
A
biosensor is an analytical device that converts a biological response into an
electrical signal.
"You
can do a diagnosis very fast, at a very low cost, and you don´t need to have a
lot of knowledge of this equipment," Pirich said by telephone from
Curitiba in southern Brazil.
"The
innovation of our work is not specific to dengue - you can use it for other
diseases," he added.
The
scientists coated the biosensor with a thin film of bacterial cellulose
nanocrystals, which effectively detected a protein known as NS1 from blood
samples, according to results published in the journal Biosensors and
Bioelectronics.
They
now want to explore ways to create cost-effective biosensor components that
could be used to analyze multiple blood samples, said Pirich.
The
technology could potentially be adapted to detect proteins from viruses such as
Zika, which is also transmitted by the Aedes
aegypti mosquito, he added.
Endemic
in Latin America and Asia, dengue infects hundreds of millions of people each
year, and is becoming more prevalent. It is often hard to diagnose as the
symptoms, which include fever and severe joint pain, are similar to a number of
other diseases.
Simple
tools such as testing blood from a finger prick, used to detect malaria, are
not available for dengue, and there is no dedicated treatment for the virus
which is usually found in urban and semi-urban areas.
Dengue
has spread to more than 100 countries from nine in 1960, according to the World
Health Organization, with cases rising to 390 million a year from 15,000 in
1960.
Experts
say the increased movement of people and goods due to globalization, as well as
worsening floods linked to climate change, are likely to speed up the spread of
dengue.
The economic impact is potentially huge, with the disease estimated to cost the Americas US$2.1 billion annually, while Southeast Asian economies could lose almost US$2.4 billion.
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