point of care technology
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2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marianne Silveira Camargo ◽  
Luiz Carlos Santana Passos ◽  
Sostenes Mistro ◽  
Daniela Arruda Soares ◽  
Clavdia Nickolaevna Kochergin ◽  
...  

Background: Living in a rural or remote area is frequently associated with impaired access to health services, which directly affects the possibility of early diagnosis and appropriate monitoring of diseases, mainly non-communicable ones, because of their asymptomatic onset and evolution. Point-of-care devices have emerged as useful technologies for improving access to several laboratory tests closely patients' beds or homes, which makes it possible to eliminate the distance barrier.Objective: To evaluate the application of point-of-care technology for glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) estimation in the assessment of glycemic control and identification of new diagnoses of diabetes in primary care among rural communities in a Brazilian municipality.Materials and Methods: We included individuals aged 18 years or older among rural communities in a Brazilian municipality. From September 2019 to February 2020, participants were assessed for anthropometrics, blood pressure, and capillary glycemia during routine primary care team activities at health fairs and in patient groups. Participants previously diagnosed with diabetes but without recent HbA1c test results or those without a previous diagnosis but with random capillary glycemia higher than 140 mg/dL were considered positive and were tested for HbA1c by using a point-of-care device.Results: At the end of the study, 913 individuals were accessed. Of these, 600 (65.7%) had no previous diagnosis of diabetes, 58/600 (9.7%) refused capillary glycemia screening and 542/600 (90.7%) were tested. Among tested individuals, 73/542 (13.5%) cases without a previous diagnosis of diabetes, were positive for capillary glycemia. Among positives, 31/73 (42.5%) had HbA1c levels that were considered indicative of prediabetes and 16/73 (21.9%) were newly diagnosed with diabetes. Among the participants, 313/913 (34.3%) were previously diagnosed with diabetes. Recent HbA1c results were unavailable for 210/313 (67.1%). These individuals were tested using point-of-care devices. Among them, 143/210 (68.1%) had HbA1c levels higher than target levels (>7% and >8% for adults and elderly individuals, respectively.Conclusion: The application of point-of-care devices for HbA1c level measurement improved the access to this test for people living in rural or remote areas. Thus, it was possible to include this technology in the routine activities of primary health care teams, which increased the rates of new diagnoses and identification of patients with uncontrolled glycemia.


Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 1239
Author(s):  
Thomas E. Serena ◽  
Philip G. Bowler ◽  
Gregory S. Schultz ◽  
Anna D’souza ◽  
Monique Y. Rennie

Early awareness and management of bacterial burden and biofilm is essential to wound healing. Semi-quantitative analysis of swab or biopsy samples is a relatively simple method for measuring wound microbial load. The accuracy of semi-quantitative culture analysis was compared to ‘gold standard’ quantitative culture analysis using 428 tissue biopsies from 350 chronic wounds. Semi-quantitative results, obtained by serial dilution of biopsy homogenates streaked onto culture plates divided into 4 quadrants representing occasional, light, moderate, and heavy growth, were compared to total bacterial load quantified as colony-forming units per gram (CFU/g). Light growth, typically considered an insignificant finding, averaged a clinically significant 2.5 × 105 CFU/g (SE = 6.3 × 104 CFU/g). Occasional growth (range: 102–106 CFU/g) and light growth (103–107 CFU/g) corresponded to quantitative values that spanned a 5-log range; moderate and heavy growth corresponded to a range of 4-log and 6-log, respectively, with a high degree of overlap in range of CFU/g per category. Since tissue biopsy and quantitative culture cannot be widely practiced and semi-quantitative analysis is unreliable, other clinically relevant approaches are required to determine wound bioburden and guide best management practices. Fluorescence imaging is a point-of-care technology that offers great potential in this field.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gert J Laubscher ◽  
Petrus J Lourens ◽  
Chantelle Venter ◽  
Lize M Grobbelaar ◽  
Douglas B Kell ◽  
...  

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) (SARS-Cov-2) has caused a worldwide, sudden and substantial increase in hospitalizations for pneumonia with multiorgan problems. An important issue is also that there is still no unified standard for the diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19. Substantial vascular events are significant accompaniments to lung complications in COVID-19 patients. Various papers have now also shown the significance of thromboelastrography (TEG) as point-of-care technology to determine the levels of coagulopathy (both clotting and bleeding) in COVID-19, in managing COVID-19 patients. Here we present two treatment protocols that may used to treat thrombotic and bleeding or thrombocytopenia pathologies. We also present a case study, where the thrombotic pathology was successfully treated with the thrombotic protocol. Both the protocols use clinical parameters like D-dimer and CRP, as well as the TEG, to closely follow the daily clotting propensity of COVID-19 patients. We conclude by suggesting that the treatment of COVID-19 patients, should be based on a combination of blood biomarkers, and results from point-of-care analyses like the TEG. Such a combination approach closely follow the physiological responses of the immune system, the haematological, as well as the coagulation system, in real-time.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ata Golparvar ◽  
Assim Boukhayma ◽  
Timothy Loayza ◽  
Antonino Caizzone ◽  
Christian Enz ◽  
...  

AbstractAfter decades of research on non-invasive glucose monitoring, invasive devices based on finger blood sampling are still the predominant reference for diabetic patients for accurately measuring blood glucose levels. Meanwhile, research continues improving point-of-care technology toward the development of painless and more accurate devices. Raman spectroscopy is well-known as a potentially valuable and painless approach for measuring glucose levels. However, previous Raman studies deal with glucose concentrations that are still order of magnitudes away with respect to human tissues’ physiological concentrations, or they propose enhancement methodologies either invasive or much complex to assure sufficient sensitivity in the physiological range. Instead, this study proposes an alternative non-enhanced Raman spectroscopy approach sensitive to glucose concentrations from 1 to 5 mmol/l, which correspond to the lowest physiopathological glucose level in human blood. Our findings suggest a very selective detection of glucose with respect to other typical metabolites, usually interfering with Raman spectroscopy’s glucose detection. We validate the proposed univariate sensing methodology on glucose solutions mixed with lactate and urea, the two most common molecules found in human serum with concentrations similar to glucose and similar features in the Raman spectra. Our findings clearly illustrate that reliable detection of glucose by Raman spectroscopy is feasible by exploiting the shifted peak at 1125 ± 10 cm–1 within physiopathological ranges.


Talanta ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 219 ◽  
pp. 121223
Author(s):  
Reuven Afriat ◽  
Daniel Chalupowicz ◽  
Evgeni Eltzov

2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (29_suppl) ◽  
pp. 309-309
Author(s):  
Sidharth Anand ◽  
Sarah Marie Larson ◽  
Katrina Fischer ◽  
John A. Glaspy

309 Background: Low accrual to clinical trials is a significant burden to advancing research efforts, particularly detrimental to patients who may benefit clinically from enrollment in a promising trial. Low accrual has been linked to a lack of provider awareness of clinical trials at the point of care and current technology solutions have not adequately addressed this important issue. Methods: We aimed to develop a system to improve clinical trial access for patients throughout UCLA Hematology-Oncology through the development of a point of care web-based tool to allow providers to easily identify available clinical trials for their patients. First, we built a comprehensive database of current clinical trials at UCLA, with special emphasis on streamlined exclusion/inclusion criteria. We incorporated this database into a front-end web and mobile-responsive tool with a user-friendly interface allowing users to rapidly identify patients eligible for clinical trial enrollment. We launched this tool 1/15/2019 to 56 oncologists at UCLA Health. Results: From 1/15/19 to 6/14/19 we had had a total of 713 unique logins to the clinical trials website. This included “academic oncologists,” those oncologists specializing in a particular disease sub-type and often a ‘hub’ for clinical trials, with an average of 6.4 logins per oncologist, and “community oncologists” with an average of 18.8 logins per oncologist over that time frame. A brief survey of users who logged in over 4 times during that time revealed that on average, 4-5 additional patients per user were screened for clinical trials not previously identified. Conclusions: Clinical trial accrual can be enhanced through improved provider awareness of available trials at the point-of-care. A well-designed user interface with features to help facilitate provider navigation to available trials and quick inclusion and exclusion criteria were critical to the success of the tool. Although the web-based tool achieved its primary purpose in improving clinical trial awareness, its utility diminished over time due to the lack of real-time updates of trial data. Based on provider feedback, if the available trial data can be updated and maintained on a regular basis, this can be a valuable tool to improve clinical trial awareness and subsequently, accrual.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S123-S129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiba Hamid ◽  
Zohaib Khurshid ◽  
Necdet Adanir ◽  
Muhammad S. Zafar ◽  
Sana Zohaib

AbstractNovel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak has termed as a controllable pandemic, and the entire world has come to a standstill trying to mitigate the disease with health systems. Health care providers, around the globe, are fighting day and night. Currently, rapid testing is taking place with the help of nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal swab, bronchoalveolar lavage, sputum, urine, and blood. All these approaches are invasive or embarrassing to the infected person. It is observed that salivary glands are hosting severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) because of angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 and the detection of high viral loads in the saliva and is playing a crucial role in virus transmission, especially from individuals showing absolutely no symptoms. Saliva is proving to be a promising noninvasive sample specimen for the diagnosis of COVID-19, thus helping to monitor the infection and prevent it from further spreading by prompt isolation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 153 (2) ◽  
pp. 84-87
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Donovan ◽  
Yazid N. Al Hamarneh ◽  
Beata Bajorek ◽  
John Papastergiou ◽  
Ross T. Tsuyuki

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Sally McFall ◽  
◽  
Mamoudou Maiga ◽  
Matthew Glucksberg ◽  
Kara Palamountain ◽  
...  

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