Capillaries in action: The sample collector section of a new microfluidic lab on a chip consists of a network of microscopic channels. Capillary action causes serum from a drop of blood to be drawn into the diagnostic device.
IBM Zurich Research Labs

Biomedicine

IBM's Move in Microfluidics

Its new chip could be used in easy and cheap diagnostic tests.

  • Tuesday, November 24, 2009
  • By Duncan Graham-Rowe

Researchers at IBM have demonstrated a novel "lab on a chip" that uses capillary action to create a potential one-step diagnostic tool, and which could ultimately test for a wide range of diseases and viruses.

The chip requires only a small drop of blood, which it draws through tiny channels within the device. The blood reacts with different disease markers to provide accurate diagnoses in about 15 minutes, says Emmanuel Delamarche, who codeveloped the device at IBM Zurich Research Laboratory in Switzerland.

A nice thing about the new chip is that it involves no moving parts, says IBM's Luc Gervais, who is also a researcher at the University Hospital Basel. Instead, it works using capillary action to filter blood and pump serum through its various chambers.

IBM is an important player in the field of microfluidics, says Jikui Luo, a microfluidics expert at the UK-based Centre for Materials Research and Innovation at the University of Bolton. However capillary driven microfluidic devices are nothing new, he says. "There is a trend toward this sort of moving-part-free device." With no mechanical parts or membranes to pump the fluid, such devices are potentially more reliable, says Luo.

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Within its new device, the IBM team has engineered capillary-driven pumps and valves to precisely control the fluid flowing through it. Consumer pregnancy tests use a similar yet simpler approach, says Gervais. But the IBM chip has the potential to test for multiple diseases simultaneously and can give a quantitative response, rather than a simple yes or no, he says. "If a patient has just had a heart attack, a yes or no test is not going to help determine the best course of action," says Gervais. "This [IBM chip] pushes point-of-care diagnostics to the next level."

In their prototype, the IBM researchers created a network of channels, some as narrow as 30 micrometers, with various detection and reaction chambers. As the filtered serum passes through these sections, antibodies embedded within the walls of the channel bind to any disease markers present in the blood. In the case of the prototype, the researchers used a marker commonly used for detecting inflammation and for assessing myocardial damage following heart attacks.

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rhansing

74 Comments

  • 804 Days Ago
  • 11/30/2009

micro chip lab

Am I correct in that the whole blood sample used will filter out the cellular components, leaving only the plasma to be tested.

this would be important since it takes at up to an hour to take the sample to the lab, centrifudge it and separate the plasma.

I can see a lot of uses, such as viral panels in Micro, TB screening,drugs of excess use... etc. (I don't like the term "Drugs of Abuse" it's judgemental.

ron hansing...

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