The need for routine and immediate healthcare monitoring has inspired near-patient testing or in other words point-of-care testing (POCT). Therefore, POCT can be defined as laboratory tests that are performed at the patient's bedside or in the immediate vicinity of the incident. Among many POCTs, nucleic acid-based testing has attracted enormous attention for the diagnosis of important genetic, inherited and infectious diseases such as cancer and coronavirus. In this review, we outline the integration of nucleic acids into the remarkable electrochemical point-of-care diagnostics including microfluidic, paper and smartphone-based approaches, CRISPR/Cas and liquid biopsy related systems and DNA damage monitoring.
Luigi Campanella, Cecilia Costanza, and Mauro Tomassetti
Subjects
Paper, Thermogravimetric analysis, Materials science, Photolysis, Analytical chemistry, Electric Conductivity, Activation energy, Conductivity, Analytical Chemistry, Thermogravimetry, chemistry.chemical_compound, Kinetics, chemistry, Titanium dioxide, Ultraviolet light, Irradiation, Cellulose, Water content, General Environmental Science
Abstract
Fabriano paper was aged by irradiation with ultraviolet light (k=310) in a veterometer for 300 hours. At fixed time intervals, samples of the paper under test were analysed by titanium dioxide photosensor to determine electrochemically the "environmental persistence" index, by a suitable conductimeter method, to determine the specific conductivity variation and by thermogravimetry to determine the moisture content, the onset temperature of the cellulose degradation process and the value of the activation energy of the same process. The behaviour of these different types of indicators displayed approximately monotonous trends as a function of time.
Published
2006
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