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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A soft, wearable microfluidic device for the capture, storage, and colorimetric sensing of sweat

TLDR
A flexible microfluidic device that adheres to human skin that collects and analyzes sweat during exercise and could be used during athletic or military training and adapted to test other bodily fluids such as tears or saliva is developed.
Abstract
Capabilities in health monitoring enabled by capture and quantitative chemical analysis of sweat could complement, or potentially obviate the need for, approaches based on sporadic assessment of blood samples. Established sweat monitoring technologies use simple fabric swatches and are limited to basic analysis in controlled laboratory or hospital settings. We present a collection of materials and device designs for soft, flexible, and stretchable microfluidic systems, including embodiments that integrate wireless communication electronics, which can intimately and robustly bond to the surface of the skin without chemical and mechanical irritation. This integration defines access points for a small set of sweat glands such that perspiration spontaneously initiates routing of sweat through a microfluidic network and set of reservoirs. Embedded chemical analyses respond in colorimetric fashion to markers such as chloride and hydronium ions, glucose, and lactate. Wireless interfaces to digital image capture hardware serve as a means for quantitation. Human studies demonstrated the functionality of this microfluidic device during fitness cycling in a controlled environment and during long-distance bicycle racing in arid, outdoor conditions. The results include quantitative values for sweat rate, total sweat loss, pH, and concentration of chloride and lactate.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Wearable biosensors for healthcare monitoring.

TL;DR: Although wearable biosensors hold promise, a better understanding of the correlations between analyte concentrations in the blood and noninvasive biofluids is needed to improve reliability.
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Lab-on-Skin: A Review of Flexible and Stretchable Electronics for Wearable Health Monitoring

TL;DR: The term "lab-on-skin" is introduced to describe a set of electronic devices that have physical properties, such as thickness, thermal mass, elastic modulus, and water-vapor permeability, which resemble those of the skin, which provide accurate, non-invasive, long-term, and continuous health monitoring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wearable sweat sensors

TL;DR: The development of wearable sweat sensors is examined, considering the challenges and opportunities for such technology in the context of personalized healthcare and the requirements of the underlying components.
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Wearable and flexible electronics for continuous molecular monitoring.

TL;DR: This article reviews and highlights recent advances in wearable and flexible sensors toward continuous and non-invasive molecular analysis in sweat, tears, saliva, interstitial fluid, blood, wound exudate as well as exhaled breath.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bio-Integrated Wearable Systems: A Comprehensive Review

TL;DR: This review summarizes the latest advances in this emerging field of "bio-integrated" technologies in a comprehensive manner that connects fundamental developments in chemistry, material science, and engineering with sensing technologies that have the potential for widespread deployment and societal benefit in human health care.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards.

Erika Bruck
- 01 Jan 1980 - 
TL;DR: Many members of the Academy of Pediatrics seem to be generally unaware of the fact that the Academy has participated for ten years in a very interesting and valuable organization, the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS).
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Fully integrated wearable sensor arrays for multiplexed in situ perspiration analysis

TL;DR: This work bridges the technological gap between signal transduction, conditioning, processing and wireless transmission in wearable biosensors by merging plastic-based sensors that interface with the skin with silicon integrated circuits consolidated on a flexible circuit board for complex signal processing.
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Skin-like pressure and strain sensors based on transparent elastic films of carbon nanotubes

TL;DR: Transparent, conducting spray-deposited films of single-walled carbon nanotubes are reported that can be rendered stretchable by applying strain along each axis, and then releasing this strain.
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Patterned Paper as a Platform for Inexpensive, Low‐Volume, Portable Bioassays

TL;DR: This communication describes a simple method for patterning paper to create well-defined, millimeter-sized channels, comprising hydrophilic paper bounded by hydrophobic polymer, that will become the basis for low-cost, portable, and technically simple multiplexed bioassays.
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Solvent compatibility of poly(dimethylsiloxane)-based microfluidic devices.

TL;DR: This paper describes the compatibility of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) with organic solvents; this compatibility is important in considering the potential of PDMS-based microfluidic devices in a number of applications, including that of microreactors for organic reactions.
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