Blood
tests allow doctors to peer into the human body to analyze people's health. But
in the future, there may be a less invasive way to obtain valuable information
about a person's health: wearable sensors that use human sweat to look for
signs of disease.
Sweat is a
rich source of chemical data that could help doctors determine what is
happening inside the human body, scientists explained in a new study.
Perspiration is loaded with molecules, ranging from simple electrically charged
ions to more complex proteins, and doctors can use sweat to diagnose certain
diseases, uncover drug use and optimize athletic performance, they said.
"Sweat
is pretty attractive to target for noninvasive wearable sensors, since
it's, of course, very easy to analyze — you don't have to poke the body to get
it — and it has a lot of information about one's health in it," said study
senior author Ali Javey, an electrical engineer at the University of
California, Berkeley.
Commercially
available wearable sensors, like the Fitbit and the Apple Watch, track users'
physical activities and some vital signs, such as heart rate. However, they do
not provide data about a user's health on a molecular level. Now, scientists
say "smart" wristbands and headbands embedded with sweat sensors
could sync data wirelessly in real time to smartphones using Bluetooth.
Previously,
studies of sweat largely relied on perspiration collected off the body in
containers that was later analyzed in a lab. Now, researchers have devised a
soft, flexible, wearable sensor array to continuously monitor changes in four molecular
components of sweat and to provide real-time tracking of a person's
health.
These
devices might one day help athletes track their performance and enable doctors
to continuously monitor the health of their patients to better personalize
their medication, the scientists said.
"This
could help tell athletes to take liquids or warn them they are going through
heat shock," Javey told Live Science.
The
invention uses five sensors to simultaneously track levels of glucose,
lactate, sodium and potassium, as well as skin temperature. This data is fed to
a flexible board of microchips that processes these signals and uses Bluetooth
to wirelessly transmit data to a smartphone. All of these electronics could be
incorporated into either a wristband or headband.
"We have a
smartphone app that plots the data from sweat in real time," Javey said.The
researchers tested the device on 26 men and women who pedaled indoors on
stationary bikes or ran outdoors on tracks and trails. Sodium and potassium in
sweat could help check for problems such as dehydration and muscle cramps.
Glucose could help keep track of blood sugar levels. Lactate levels could
indicate blood flow problems, and skin temperature could reveal overheating and
other problems.
In
addition, the skin temperature sensor helps adjust the chemical sensors to make
sure they get proper readings, the researchers said. For instance, higher skin
temperatures increase the electrical signals from glucose, which can make it
look as if people are releasing more glucose in their sweat than they actually
are.
Previous
wearable sweat monitors could track only a single molecule at a time, which
could generate misleading information, the researchers said. For example, if a
lone sensor showed a drop in a molecule's level, it might not be because that
molecule's level is actually falling in a person's sweat, but rather because
sweating has stopped, the sensor has detached from the skin or the sensor is
failing. The inclusion of multiple sensors could help shed light on what is
happening to a person and the sensor array as a whole.
In the
near future, the researchers hope to shrink the device's electronics down and
boost the number of molecules it monitors. Such molecules could include heavy
metals such as lead, which recently made news for appearing in dangerously high
levels in the water of Flint, Michigan, Javey noted.
In the
long term, the researchers hope to conduct large-scale studies with their
device on many volunteers. The data such work gathers could help researchers
better understand what levels of various molecules in sweat mean for athletic
performance and human health, Javey said.
The
researchers have filed a patent on their work, although they are not currently
collaborating with anyone to commercialize the sensors, Javey said.

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