Dynamic HIV testing device developed

Washington, May 20 (ANI): Scientists have developed a relatively simple electronic gadget that could speed up HIV/AIDS diagnostics and improve accuracy particularly in parts of the world with very limited access to healthcare workers.

Ali El Kateeb of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, at the University of Michigan, in Dearborn, explains that rapid blood tests for diagnosing HIV have become widely available but are prone to human error in reading the results.

The currently available kits require a drop of blood placed in a well containing reactant test chemicals. A positive test produces a colored band perpendicular to a “control” bar that appears only if the test procedure was carried out correctly.

El Kateeb points out that even such an apparently simple test must be carried out by a trained technician and in a clinic or laboratory.

Unfortunately, errors in reading the test pattern can occur and are particularly common in parts of the world where there is a dearth of qualified technicians.

The result is that false positives that have a negative psychological effect on patients are common while false negatives mean patients thinking they are free of the virus will continue to infect others unwittingly.

Previously, El Kateeb had developed a static imaging device – akin to a simple digital camera, that could be used to identify valid and positive test results using a built-in computer chip modified to run a dedicated pattern recognition program.

The static approach was not entirely successful because it relies on precise manufacture of the test kit as well as accurate placement of the “eye” of the imaging device above the test kit.

Now, El Kateeb has developed a “dynamic” version of the device that overcomes this significant drawback.

In the dynamic approach, the built-in software embedded on a Reconfigurable System-On-Chip, first determines the relative position of the detector”s 384 × 288 pixel eye relative to the test kit well, illuminated by four LEDs, using a rapid analysis of pixel density in the captured image. The software then identifies the control bar and detects whether or not the perpendicular test bar is present regardless of their exact positioning within the well.

El Kateeb says this dynamic detection technique is 100percent accurate in laboratory testing. The device is inexpensive, portable and self-contained and so could be made available to small clinics and pharmacies at low cost. Moreover, it requires no technician intervention, which will make it useful for rural areas in the developing world.

The device is described in the International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology. (ANI)

Scientists developing 3-in-1 ”dipstick’ test for early detection of parasitic diseases

Washington, March 23 (ANI): Scientists are trying to develop a 3-in-1 ”dipstick” test for early detection of parasitic diseases such as Chagas” disease, leishmaniasis, and African trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness).

Most cases of these diseases are identified at a late stage, and together they cause tens of thousands of deaths each year and untold suffering. The drugs used to treat late-stage infections are often toxic and have potentially fatal side effects.

Ellen Beaulieu, a medicinal chemist in the Center for Infectious Diseases in the Biosciences Division of SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif., said: “Early diagnosis is the key to improving treatment of these diseases.

“Diagnosis with conventional tests is difficult in developing countries where these diseases occur. We hope that our low-cost, simple test will play a role in helping poorer parts of the world combat these diseases and the poverty they engender.”

The new test exploits the common heritage of the parasites that cause Chagas, leishmaniasis, and African sleeping sickness. All three are closely related members of what scientists know as the trypanosomatidae family. Working together with Mary Tanga, Senior Director of Medicinal Chemistry in SRI”s Biosciences Division, Beaulieu and colleagues developed special dyes that allow detection of an early disease stage. Moreover, the test does not require the use of sophisticated lab equipment, and can produce results in as little as one hour.

Initial tests under laboratory conditions show that the dyes reveal the presence of the parasite marker and glow in ultraviolet light from a simple, handheld lamp. SRI researchers are now trying to improve the sensitivity of the dyes.

The goal is to develop a “dipstick” test that allows detection of the parasite metabolite using a simple paper strip like those used in urine tests for diabetes. Such a test could allow health workers in remote areas to diagnose the diseases by dipping the strip in a drop of blood and exposing it to ultraviolet light.

The test was described at the 239th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society. (ANI)

New test to detect tainted milk

Washington, Sept 13 (ANI): Researchers have developed a simple test that would help detect tainted milk within few hours.

Amer AbuGhazaleh, from Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s College of Agricultural Sciences, and Salam Ibrahim, a food microbiologist from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, have shown that the combination of certain bacteria and a common purple dye can reveal the presence of toxins in milk in just a few hours.

“To date, detecting the presence of toxins or pesticides has only been possible by sending samples to a laboratory and waiting a few days for the results,” said AbuGhazaleh.

“An important step toward improving the safety of our dairy supply would be the development of an effective, simple and rapid test that would allow farmers or processors to detect the presence of foreign substances,” the expert added.

During the study, the scientists decided to focus on the bacteria that ferment lactose (milk’s sugars), producing lactic acid.

“For one thing, these bacteria already exist in milk, so if you add some, you’re not doing anything strange,” said AbuGhazaleh.

“Second, they produce a change over time (the lactic acid) that we could monitor. If we didn’t see the change, we would know something was wrong,” the expert said.

They began in 2008 with a few bacterial strains they already had and cyanide, also readily available. Experiments showed not only that the toxin could slow or stop lactic acid production but that this effect increased with the toxic load. Further, the effect appeared in less than four hours.

They then added purple dye to milk samples containing both toxins and bacteria and to samples containing only bacteria.

After eight hours, dye in the non-toxic milk turned yellow, indicating the presence of increased lactic acid, while dye in the toxin-laden milk retained its original purple.

“This kind of colour test could be performed by farmers themselves,” AbuGhazleh said.

“They could add the bacteria and the dye to a sample, leave it alone for a little while and then come back to see if there is any change in the color. If there isn’t, there are problems with the milk,” he added. (ANI)

New test distinguishes impure honey from the real thing

Washington, May 11 (ANI): In a new study, researchers in France are reporting development of a simple test for distinguishing 100 percent natural honeys from adulterated or impure versions that they say are increasingly being foisted off on consumers.

The study, by Bernard Herbreteau and colleagues from Universite de Lyon, France, points out that the high price of honey and its limited supply has led some beekeepers and food processors to fraudulently make and sell impure honey doped with inexpensive sweeteners, such as corn syrup.

These knock-offs are almost physically and chemically indistinguishable from the real thing. According to the researchers, scientists need a better way to identify adulterated honey.

Herbreteau and colleagues describe a new, highly sensitive test that uses a special type of chromatography to separate and identify complex sugars (polysaccharides) on their characteristic chemical fingerprints.

To test their method, the scientists obtained three different varieties of pure honey from a single beekeeper and then prepared adulterated samples of the honeys by adding 1 percent corn syrup.

They showed that the new technique accurately distinguished the impure honeys from the pure versions based on differences in their sugar content. (ANI)

Faith in God ‘reduces anxiety’

London, Mar 18 (ANI): Religious people are less anxious than non-believers when they make mistakes, researchers at the University of Toronto, Scarborough, have found.

In the study, they found that religious people exhibit lower activity than non-believers in a brain region linked to anxiety when erring on a simple test.

“Religion offers an interpretative framework to understand the world. It lets you know when to act, how to act, and what to do in specific situation. It provides a kind of blueprint on how to interact with the world,” New Scientist quoted Michael Inzlicht, a neuroscientist at the University of Toronto, Scarborough, who led the new study, as saying.

He said that religion, and perhaps other strongly held belief systems, buffer against second-guessing decisions.

For the study, Inzlicht’s team tested 50 university students from diverse religious and cultural backgrounds. Christians made up most participants, but his team also tested Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and atheists.

With a technique that gauges brain activity via dozens of electrodes on the scalp called electroencephalography (EEG), the researchers focused on action in a small brain area called the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC).

“When it’s fired, the response engendered is ‘uh oh, pay attention, something is amiss here’,” he said.

People with anxiety disorders tend to show high activity in this region, and drugs that treat their symptoms calm brain activity in the ACC.

Volunteers took a simple test that other neuroscientists have used to measure ACC activity. On a monitor, subjects see a colour spelled out in letters that either correspond to or contradict the meaning of the word – for example, red spelled out in red letters or blue spelled out in yellow letters, for instance.

Volunteers must press a button to indicate the colour of the letters. The students with strong religious beliefs, as measured by their agreement with statements such as “My religion is better than others” or “I would support a war if my religion supported it”, exhibited less ACC activation than students with less fervent beliefs.

Tests with another group of students, who were asked how strongly they believed or disbelieved in God, came to a similar conclusion.

Even after accounting for self-esteem, intelligence and other personality traits, the researchers found that religious devotion predicted volunteers’ ACC activity.

One explanation is that people with a genetic predisposition to reduced ACC activity gravitate toward religion.

“It’s possible that if you’re born with a certain kind of brain, you’re predisposed to religion,” Inzlicht said.

However, he suspects that religious belief is driving the association.

The study is published in the journal of Psychological Science. (ANI)

Pre-eclampsia may stem from misfolded proteins in urine

Washington, Jan 31 (ANI): Scientists at Yale School of Medicine have found that the key to pre-eclampsia could be found in proteins that misfold and aggregate in the urine.

Preeclampsia is a common, but serious hypertension complication of pregnancy that has puzzled doctors and researchers for decades. It is also a leading cause of preterm delivery.

Delivery is the only reliable treatment for preeclampsia, and establishing a correct diagnosis can be difficult, especially in women with preexisting hypertension, lupus or kidney disease.

Researchers claimed that these misshapen proteins can be easily detected in the urine, affording a new approach to early diagnosis of the disease.

“These results support the hypothesis that preeclampsia is a pregnancy-specific protein misfolding disease. Our urine dye test is a rapid and non-invasive test that can be used to definitively diagnose preeclampsia,” said lead author on the abstract, Irina Buhimschi, M.D., associate professor in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences.

In their study, conducted on 111 pregnant women, researchers used proteomics to identify key abnormal proteins in the urine weeks before preeclampsia becomes clinically apparent.

In order to carry out their individual functions properly, proteins must fold themselves correctly into three-dimensional structures. Misfolding, or failure to fold into the intended shape, produces proteins with different properties that are mainly guided by their shape rather than their amino acid sequence. Proteins of different amino acid sequences may share common shapes when misfolded.

The scientists designed a test based on a dye that sticks to misfolded proteins and analyzed the urine of women in the study starting in the first trimester of pregnancy.

Buhimschi was able to use this simple test to identify a study participant who went on to develop severe preeclampsia and required early delivery.

Further work in Buhimschi’s lab, using conformation-specific antibodies showed that misfolded shapes similar to those found in Alzheimer’s disease are also present in the urine of preeclamptic women.

On the other hand, the misfolded aggregates identified in preeclampsia are composed of a group of different proteins, including SERPIN-A1 (also known as alpha-1-antitrypsin).

Buhimschi said: “This novel identification of preeclampsia as a disorder of protein misfolding opens a door for researchers that may lead to testing of new drugs or developing new therapies. Our future work will seek to determine whether the different shapes employed by the misfolded proteins in preeclampsia are linked to specific clinical symptoms and the different ways this intriguing disease manifests.”

The study was presented at the Society for Maternal Fetal Medicine scientific meetings in San Diego, Calif. (ANI)