New Diagnostic Device Can Detect Malaria In Just 5 Seconds
“Early detection is very important, typically in the first five to seven days before symptoms arise, so that treatment can begin.”
“It’s pretty bare bones,” said Lewandowski, who is also the CEO of Disease Diagnostic Group, a startup developing the device. “Malaria parasites in human blood create iron crystals that are magnetic in nature. As an engineer, I thought about creating a way to detect these magnetic crystals quickly,” he said.How it works? Well, you prick a finger and insert the blood drop into the box through the cuvette. If malaria is present, it will form crystals that will be attracted by the magnets in the device, forming a pattern. This pattern is detected by the laser which then diagnoses the presence or absence of malaria. If malaria is absent, no crystals, no magnetic attraction and no pattern. The technology is simple, quick and easy-to-use. Recently, a lot of work is being done on diagnostic devices that involve rapid blood testing but Lewandowski said his device is novel and is not merely ‘reinventing the wheel’. He said:
“Our technology is just speeding up that same process and bringing down the cost and currently the company is exploring how the technology could pivot to test for other mosquito-borne diseases like dengue fever and Zika virus.”
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