• Now, a gadget attached to a smartphone can help with Zika virus detection

    Sci & Tech
    Now, a gadget attached to a smartphone can help with Zika virus detection

    Infections with the Zika virus are now identified by laboratory-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing, which can amplify the virus' genetic material and identify it. 

    Digital Desk: According to a recent
    study published in the journal Analyst, scientists have created a device that
    can be attached to a smartphone and quickly test for the Zika virus in a single
    droplet of blood.



    If
    you have Zika, malaria, dengue, or chikungunya, you can visit the doctor with a
    fever and they won't know why, according to Brian Cunningham, a professor at
    the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. "Mosquito-borne viruses cause
    deadly diseases, but they have comparable symptoms."



    He
    emphasizes the need for identifying the virus and continues, "But it's
    vital to know whether it's Zika, especially if the patient is pregnant, because
    the repercussions for a growing foetus are really serious." Zika causes
    developmental abnormalities in newborns.



    Infections
    with the Zika virus are now identified by laboratory-based polymerase chain
    reaction (PCR) testing, which can amplify the virus' genetic material and
    identify it. Despite being quick, easy, accurate, and sensitive,
    laboratory-based approaches frequently call for skilled workers and include
    complicated procedures.



    Here,
    the researchers employed a technique suitable for remote testing called
    Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification to identify the virus in the blood
    samples. LAMP just needs one temperature, 65°C, making it simpler to regulate
    than PCR, which needs 20–40 repeated temperature changes to amplify the genetic
    material.



    Particularly
    when it comes to the other components in a blood sample, PCR tests are
    particularly sensitive to the presence of contaminants. As a result, before the
    sample can be used, it must first be cleansed. However, LAMP does not call for
    such a purification step.



    The
    equipment is clipped onto a smartphone, and the test is run by inserting a
    cartridge containing the reagents needed to detect the virus. Within five
    minutes of the patient adding a drop of blood, one group of chemicals breaks
    free the blood cells and viruses. It is heated to 65°C by a heater beneath the
    cartridge.



    If the blood sample includes the Zika
    virus, the second set of chemicals increases the viral genetic material, and the
    liquid inside the cartridge fluoresces brilliant green. It takes 25 minutes to
    complete the operation.



    "In order to ensure that the
    smartphone's rear camera is focused on the cartridge while the amplification is
    taking place, we created a clip-on gadget. Positive reactions result in tiny
    green fluorescence blooms that eventually fill the entire cartridge with green
    light "explained, Cunningham.



    To concurrently detect other
    mosquito-borne diseases, the researchers are already creating similar gadgets
    and are attempting to make them even smaller.