Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Emerging Smart Contact Lens Technology for Wearable Biosensors and Drug Delivery: Biomarkers in Tears

View through CrossRef
There is a growing need for personalised medicine to manage and prevent diseases, as well as to monitor patient health continuously, even outside the hospital setting. Biosensor devices hold a huge potential in addressing this need and can aid in decentralising healthcare by offering faster disease diagnosis and prognosis. Integrating biosensors with wearables such as contact lenses has widened their scope of application and addresses some key challenges associated with other techniques, such as invasive monitoring and the need for bulky equipment. Indeed, traditional approaches tend to be invasive, such as those used for diabetes management that require regular finger pricks to obtain a blood sample to monitor glucose. In contrast, smart contact lenses use tears, which are naturally and regularly replenished. Tears are rich in biomarkers such as proteins and electrolytes, and variations in their concentration can be monitored non-invasively to offer valuable information related to the onset or progression of disease. In addition, intraocular pressure monitoring for glaucoma has been achieved using contact lenses utilising nanomaterials and microfluidics technology. With these promising successes, current researchers seek to address neurodegenerative diseases and cancer diagnosis and prognosis using contact lenses. Contact lenses can also be used as ocular drug delivery systems as they possess 10 times more drug bioavailability advantage than topical administration. By combining contact lenses with a sensing platform, a power source, an antenna, a data transmitter, and a display, smart contact lenses have become more than vision collection devices. Although considerable challenges remain to be tackled because we are still at the initial stages of this technological advancement, the number of diseases and drugs that could potentially be sensed and delivered, respectively, seems vast.
Title: Emerging Smart Contact Lens Technology for Wearable Biosensors and Drug Delivery: Biomarkers in Tears
Description:
There is a growing need for personalised medicine to manage and prevent diseases, as well as to monitor patient health continuously, even outside the hospital setting.
Biosensor devices hold a huge potential in addressing this need and can aid in decentralising healthcare by offering faster disease diagnosis and prognosis.
Integrating biosensors with wearables such as contact lenses has widened their scope of application and addresses some key challenges associated with other techniques, such as invasive monitoring and the need for bulky equipment.
Indeed, traditional approaches tend to be invasive, such as those used for diabetes management that require regular finger pricks to obtain a blood sample to monitor glucose.
In contrast, smart contact lenses use tears, which are naturally and regularly replenished.
Tears are rich in biomarkers such as proteins and electrolytes, and variations in their concentration can be monitored non-invasively to offer valuable information related to the onset or progression of disease.
In addition, intraocular pressure monitoring for glaucoma has been achieved using contact lenses utilising nanomaterials and microfluidics technology.
With these promising successes, current researchers seek to address neurodegenerative diseases and cancer diagnosis and prognosis using contact lenses.
Contact lenses can also be used as ocular drug delivery systems as they possess 10 times more drug bioavailability advantage than topical administration.
By combining contact lenses with a sensing platform, a power source, an antenna, a data transmitter, and a display, smart contact lenses have become more than vision collection devices.
Although considerable challenges remain to be tackled because we are still at the initial stages of this technological advancement, the number of diseases and drugs that could potentially be sensed and delivered, respectively, seems vast.

Related Results

VAGINAL BIRTH TRAUMA AND PRIMIPARITY; EXPERIENCE AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL
VAGINAL BIRTH TRAUMA AND PRIMIPARITY; EXPERIENCE AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL
Objective: To determine the effects of perineal tears during vaginal birth in primiparouswomenMethodology: This Cross-Sectional Study was conducted at the Department of Obstetrics&...
Perineal Tears; Frequency, Severity and Risk factors in a Tertiary Care Hospital
Perineal Tears; Frequency, Severity and Risk factors in a Tertiary Care Hospital
Objective: To observe the frequency, severity, and risk factors of perineal tears during vaginal delivery in a tertiary care hospital.  Methodology: This was a cohort study of wom...
Selection of Injectable Drug Product Composition using Machine Learning Models (Preprint)
Selection of Injectable Drug Product Composition using Machine Learning Models (Preprint)
BACKGROUND As of July 2020, a Web of Science search of “machine learning (ML)” nested within the search of “pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics” yielded over 100...
Combined Meniscus Repair and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Combined Meniscus Repair and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Abstract Meniscal tear patterns associated with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears, such as root tears and ramp lesions are common but less easily recognize...
EPD Electronic Pathogen Detection v1
EPD Electronic Pathogen Detection v1
Electronic pathogen detection (EPD) is a non - invasive, rapid, affordable, point- of- care test, for Covid 19 resulting from infection with SARS-CoV-2 virus. EPD scanning techno...
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Is a Fitbit a Diary? Self-Tracking and Autobiography
Data becomes something of a mirror in which people see themselves reflected. (Sorapure 270)In a 2014 essay for The New Yorker, the humourist David Sedaris recounts an obsession spu...
Advanced Materials and Assembly Strategies for Wearable Biosensors: A Review
Advanced Materials and Assembly Strategies for Wearable Biosensors: A Review
Recent technological advances of soft functional materials and their assembly into wearable (i.e., on-skin) biosensors lead to the development of ground-breaking biomedical applica...
Morphometric OCT parameters of the lens under accommodative stimulus. Report 1. Assessment of age-related changes
Morphometric OCT parameters of the lens under accommodative stimulus. Report 1. Assessment of age-related changes
Introduction. The structural approach to studying the mechanism of accommodation and its age-related changes focuses on analyzing morphometric parameters (size, shape, and position...

Back to Top