2217
Analysis of Single Blood Entities Using an Ultramicroelectrode through Single-Entity Electrochemistry

Tuesday, 31 May 2022: 14:40
West Meeting Room 209 (Vancouver Convention Center)
J. Lee (Sookmyung Women's University, Ewha Womans University), S. Hong (Sookmyung Women's University), and B. K. Kim (Ewha Womans University)
The research was conducted with the aim of analyzing individual human blood cells in the presence of redox species based on single-entity electrochemistry. Various blood cells (e.g., red blood cell, white blood cell, and platelets) perform a role directly related to survival, such as oxygen transport, hemostasis, and immune response, as they move through the whole body’s blood vessels. However, with the current lab-on-a-chip typed biosensor technology, the factors that can be measured using a small amount of blood are limited to uric acid, cholesterol, glucose, or hemoglobin in the blood. In clinical laboratories, common methods for measuring individual blood counts are automated hematology analyzers based on the automated Coulter cell counting method or flow cytometry, which produce a huge amount of blood count results, but are limited. For this reason, it is proposed a method for detecting individual blood cells that can be applied to a biosensor simply and quickly.

References

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