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Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection

[Image: see text] This paper reports on a low-cost, quantitative, point-of-care solution for the early detection of nitrite, a common biomarker for urinary tract infections (UTIs). In a healthy individual, nitrite is not found in the urine. However, a subject with a suspected UTI will produce nitrit...

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Autores principales: Siu, Vince S., Lu, Minhua, Hsieh, Kuan Yu, Raines, Kierstyn, Asaad, Youssef A., Patel, Krishna, Afzali-Ardakani, Ali, Wen, Bo, Budd, Russell
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8991914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35415364
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c07205
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author Siu, Vince S.
Lu, Minhua
Hsieh, Kuan Yu
Raines, Kierstyn
Asaad, Youssef A.
Patel, Krishna
Afzali-Ardakani, Ali
Wen, Bo
Budd, Russell
author_facet Siu, Vince S.
Lu, Minhua
Hsieh, Kuan Yu
Raines, Kierstyn
Asaad, Youssef A.
Patel, Krishna
Afzali-Ardakani, Ali
Wen, Bo
Budd, Russell
author_sort Siu, Vince S.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] This paper reports on a low-cost, quantitative, point-of-care solution for the early detection of nitrite, a common biomarker for urinary tract infections (UTIs). In a healthy individual, nitrite is not found in the urine. However, a subject with a suspected UTI will produce nitrite in their urine since the bacteria present will convert nitrate into nitrite. Traditionally, nitrite is monitored by urinary dipsticks that are either read by eye or using a reflectance spectrophotometer. Both methods provide a semiquantitative positive or negative result at best. In this paper, we described a novel, affordable, portable transmission-based colorimeter for the quantitative measurement of nitrite. A unique permutation of the Griess reaction was optimized for the clinical detection of nitrite in urine and is reported. By using nitrite spiked in a salt buffer, artificial, and human urine samples, the performance of the colorimeter was evaluated against dipsticks read using two commercial dipstick analyzers, Urisys 1100 (Roche Diagnostics) and Clinitek Status+ (Siemens Medical Solutions). The colorimeter was able to detect the clinically relevant range of nitrite from 0.78 to 200 μM in a salt buffer. The detection limit in artificial urine was determined as 1.6 μM, which is ∼16× more sensitive than commercial dipstick reflectance analyzers, enabling the possibility for earlier detection of urinary infections. The colorimeter is assembled using off-the-shelf components (<$80) and controlled by a smartphone application via low-energy bluetooth. It has a built-in color correction algorithm and is designed to enable for a turbidity correction in samples containing bacteria or other cellular debris as well. The mobile application can display the nitrite concentration for a single sample or display the results over a period of time. Tracking urinalysis results longitudinally can help identify trends such as increases in nitrite concentrations over an individual’s baseline and identify possible infections earlier. While the detection of nitrite was showcased here, this portable analyzer can be expanded to other colorimetric-based chemistries to detect a panel of biomarkers, which can improve the overall sensitivity and specificity of the desired assay.
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spelling pubmed-89919142022-04-11 Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection Siu, Vince S. Lu, Minhua Hsieh, Kuan Yu Raines, Kierstyn Asaad, Youssef A. Patel, Krishna Afzali-Ardakani, Ali Wen, Bo Budd, Russell ACS Omega [Image: see text] This paper reports on a low-cost, quantitative, point-of-care solution for the early detection of nitrite, a common biomarker for urinary tract infections (UTIs). In a healthy individual, nitrite is not found in the urine. However, a subject with a suspected UTI will produce nitrite in their urine since the bacteria present will convert nitrate into nitrite. Traditionally, nitrite is monitored by urinary dipsticks that are either read by eye or using a reflectance spectrophotometer. Both methods provide a semiquantitative positive or negative result at best. In this paper, we described a novel, affordable, portable transmission-based colorimeter for the quantitative measurement of nitrite. A unique permutation of the Griess reaction was optimized for the clinical detection of nitrite in urine and is reported. By using nitrite spiked in a salt buffer, artificial, and human urine samples, the performance of the colorimeter was evaluated against dipsticks read using two commercial dipstick analyzers, Urisys 1100 (Roche Diagnostics) and Clinitek Status+ (Siemens Medical Solutions). The colorimeter was able to detect the clinically relevant range of nitrite from 0.78 to 200 μM in a salt buffer. The detection limit in artificial urine was determined as 1.6 μM, which is ∼16× more sensitive than commercial dipstick reflectance analyzers, enabling the possibility for earlier detection of urinary infections. The colorimeter is assembled using off-the-shelf components (<$80) and controlled by a smartphone application via low-energy bluetooth. It has a built-in color correction algorithm and is designed to enable for a turbidity correction in samples containing bacteria or other cellular debris as well. The mobile application can display the nitrite concentration for a single sample or display the results over a period of time. Tracking urinalysis results longitudinally can help identify trends such as increases in nitrite concentrations over an individual’s baseline and identify possible infections earlier. While the detection of nitrite was showcased here, this portable analyzer can be expanded to other colorimetric-based chemistries to detect a panel of biomarkers, which can improve the overall sensitivity and specificity of the desired assay. American Chemical Society 2022-03-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8991914/ /pubmed/35415364 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c07205 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Permits non-commercial access and re-use, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained; but does not permit creation of adaptations or other derivative works (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Siu, Vince S.
Lu, Minhua
Hsieh, Kuan Yu
Raines, Kierstyn
Asaad, Youssef A.
Patel, Krishna
Afzali-Ardakani, Ali
Wen, Bo
Budd, Russell
Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title_full Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title_fullStr Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title_full_unstemmed Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title_short Toward a Quantitative Colorimeter for Point-of-Care Nitrite Detection
title_sort toward a quantitative colorimeter for point-of-care nitrite detection
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8991914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35415364
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.1c07205
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