The simple and inexpensive smartphone attachment that can conduct automated antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
Highlights
- Antimicrobial resistant bacteria are becoming more common in pathogens causing pneumonia, diarrhea and sepsis.
- An inexpensive smartphone attachment can conduct automated antimicrobial susceptibility testing.
"This work is extremely important and timely, given that drug-resistant bacteria are increasingly becoming a global threat rendering many of our first-line antibiotics ineffective," said Aydogan Ozcan, Chancellor's Professor of Electrical Engineering and Bioengineering at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
"Our new smartphone-based technology can help put laboratory-quality testing into much wider adoption, especially in resource-limited regions."
The UCLA device connects to a smartphone and has a plate that can hold up to 96 wells for testing. An array of LEDs illuminates the sample and then the phone's camera is used to sense small changes in light transmission of each well containing a different dose selected from a panel of antibiotics.
Images are sent to a server to automatically perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing and the results are returned to the smartphone in about one minute.
A susceptible result indicates that the organisms that have infected the patient should respond to therapy, while a resistant organism will not be inhibited by the concentrations of antibiotic achieved with normal dosages used for that drug. "This mobile reader could eliminate the need for trained diagnosticians to perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing, reduce the cost barrier for routine testing, and assist in tracking of bacterial resistance globally," Garner said.
Reference
- Aydogan Ozcan et al., UCLA researchers combat antimicrobial resistance using smartphones, Scientific Reports (2016).
Source-Medindia