Microfluidic systems for infectious disease diagnostics.
Thomas LehnertMartin A M GijsPublished in: Lab on a chip (2024)
Microorganisms, encompassing both uni- and multicellular entities, exhibit remarkable diversity as omnipresent life forms in nature. They play a pivotal role by supplying essential components for sustaining biological processes across diverse ecosystems, including higher host organisms. The complex interactions within the human gut microbiota are crucial for metabolic functions, immune responses, and biochemical signalling, particularly through the gut-brain axis. Viruses also play important roles in biological processes, for example by increasing genetic diversity through horizontal gene transfer when replicating inside living cells. On the other hand, infection of the human body by microbiological agents may lead to severe physiological disorders and diseases. Infectious diseases pose a significant burden on global healthcare systems, characterized by substantial variations in the epidemiological landscape. Fast spreading antibiotic resistance or uncontrolled outbreaks of communicable diseases are major challenges at present. Furthermore, delivering field-proven point-of-care diagnostic tools to the most severely affected populations in low-resource settings is particularly important and challenging. New paradigms and technological approaches enabling rapid and informed disease management need to be implemented. In this respect, infectious disease diagnostics taking advantage of microfluidic systems combined with integrated biosensor-based pathogen detection offers a host of innovative and promising solutions. In this review, we aim to outline recent activities and progress in the development of microfluidic diagnostic tools. Our literature research mainly covers the last 5 years. We will follow a classification scheme based on the human body systems primarily involved at the clinical level or on specific pathogen transmission modes. Important diseases, such as tuberculosis and malaria, will be addressed more extensively.
Keyphrases
- infectious diseases
- endothelial cells
- genetic diversity
- healthcare
- living cells
- single cell
- immune response
- label free
- high throughput
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- circulating tumor cells
- machine learning
- pluripotent stem cells
- systematic review
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- candida albicans
- single molecule
- emergency department
- multidrug resistant
- quantum dots
- white matter
- dendritic cells
- hiv infected
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- gram negative
- hepatitis c virus
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- cerebral ischemia
- drug induced
- plasmodium falciparum
- genome wide analysis
- affordable care act