ScienceA new technology uses human teardrops to spot disease

A new technology uses human teardrops to spot disease


Human tears could carry a flood of useful information.

With just a few drops, a new technique can spot eye disease and even glimpse signs of diabetes, scientists report July 20 in ACS Nano.  

“We wanted to demonstrate the potential of using tears to detect disease,” says Fei Liu, a biomedical engineer at Wenzhou Medical University in China. It’s possible the droplets could open a window for scientists to peer into the entire body, he says, and one day even let people quickly test their tears at home.

Like saliva and urine, tears contain tiny sacs stuffed with cellular messages (SN: 9/3/13). If scientists could intercept these microscopic mailbags, they could offer new intel on what’s happening inside the body. But collecting enough of these sacs, called exosomes, is tricky. Unlike fluid from other body parts, just a trickle of liquid leaks from the eyes.

So Liu’s team devised a new way to capture the sacs from tiny volumes of tears. First, the researchers collected tears from study participants. Then, the team added a solution containing the tears to a device with two nanoporous membranes, vibrated the membranes and sucked the solution through. Within minutes, the technique lets small molecules escape, leaving the sacs behind for analysis.

The results gave scientists an eyeful. Different types of dry-eye disease shed their own molecular fingerprints in people’s tears, the team found. What’s more, tears could potentially help doctors monitor how a patient’s diabetes is progressing. 

Now, the scientists want to tap tears for evidence of other diseases as well as depression or emotional stress, says study coauthor Luke Lee, a bioengineer at Harvard Medical School. “This is just the beginning,” he says. “Tears express something that we haven’t really explored.”



Original Source Link

Latest News

Here’s why this week’s inflation report could be a big market mover

Inflation could be a market-driving fear again this week when September data is released, according to Bank of...

$16 Billion In Assets To Be Repaid, FTT Price Soars 20%

Ronaldo is an experienced crypto enthusiast dedicated to the nascent and ever-evolving industry. With over five years of...

The old US economic policy is dying and the new cannot be born

Stay informed with free updatesSimply sign up to the Global Economy myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your...

Watch the trailer for Submerged, Apple’s first scripted Vision Pro short

Apple just released the trailer for Submerged, the first scripted immersive video for the Vision Pro. The short,...

Reason’s New Documentary on Backpage.com Is Streaming Exclusively on CivL

On Wednesday, August 28, 2024, the veteran newspaper editor Michael Lacey walked into a federal courthouse in Phoenix...

Must Read

Watch the trailer for Submerged, Apple’s first scripted Vision Pro short

Apple just released the trailer for Submerged, the...

Man turns $88K into $415M with Tesla, then sues after losing it all

Christopher DeVocht made a large share of his...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you