homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Hand-held breath monitor can detect if you're infected with the flu

It's similar to the breath alcohol tester used by the police but for the flu.

Tibi Puiu
February 7, 2017 @ 11:31 pm

share Share

Perena Gouma pictured with her invention -- a hand-held breath monitor that can detect the flu virus. Credit: UT Arlington

Perena Gouma pictured with her invention — a hand-held breath monitor that can detect the flu virus. Credit: UT Arlington

American researchers from the University of Texas at Arlington have invented a breath analyzer similar to the one used by the police to screen DUIs, only instead of alcohol the device detects the flu virus. You simply exhale into the nozzle of the device and semiconductor sensors quickly detect whether or not there’s a sign of the flu.

Sensors typically used to detect asthma and diabetes were combined to spot biomarkers of the flu virus. Credit: UTA.

Sensors typically used to detect asthma and diabetes were combined to spot biomarkers of the flu virus. Credit: UTA.

A flu diagnosis device might seem silly. After all, it’s no secret you’ve got the flu when the forehead is burning, muscles ache or nose is running. But such a device could be truly valuable if people used it to screen for flu before the symptoms hit.

Perena Gouma,  a professor in the Materials Science and Engineering Department at The University of Texas at Arlington, envisions such a tool used anywhere from hospitals to drugstores. People simply have to exhale and can in a matter of seconds learn whether or not they’ve been infected. Patients can then take preemptive measures before the symptoms kick in. Whole flu pandemics could be halted and lives saved — around 4,600 people die because of the flu yearly, according to the CDC.

The flu breathanalyzer’s working principle works on the validated idea that a person infected with the flu exhales certain biomarkers. These markers have been extensively studied and documented in scientific literature. Based on this knowledge, it was a matter of tuning gas sensors to these markers. Specifically, a nitric oxide and an ammonia sensor were used to make it possible to detect the flu virus.

“I think that technology like this is going to revolutionize personalized diagnostics. This will allow people to be proactive and catch illnesses early, and the technology can easily be used to detect other diseases, such as Ebola virus disease, simply by changing the sensors,” said Gouma.

Previously, the only way to detect flu biomarkers from a person’s breath was to use very expensive lab equipment operated by trained, highly paid personnel. Theoretically, anyone could use the device developed at UTA.

There’s no reason to believe why a similar device can’t be used to detect a range of other diseases, including Ebola.

Findings appeared in the journal Sensors.

 

 

share Share

Your nails could be a sign of whether a recession is coming or not

You may already be wearing "recession nails" and not even know it.

These Moths in Australia Use the Milky Way as a GPS to Fly 1,000 Kilometers

A threatened Australian insect joins the exclusive club of celestial navigators.

A Giant Roman Soldier Lost His Shoe Near Hadrian's Wall 2,000 Years Ago

Roman soldiers were fit, but this one was built differently.

Astronomers Found a Volcano Hiding in Plain Sight on Mars

It's not active now, and it hasn't been active for some time, but it's a volcano.

The US just started selling lab-grown salmon

FDA-approved fish fillet now served at a Portland restaurant

Climate Change Unleashed a Hidden Wave That Triggered a Planetary Tremor

The Earth was trembling every 90 seconds. Now, we know why.

Archaeologists May Have Found Odysseus’ Sanctuary on Ithaca

A new discovery ties myth to place, revealing centuries of cult worship and civic ritual.

The World’s Largest Sand Battery Just Went Online in Finland. It could change renewable energy

This sand battery system can store 1,000 megawatt-hours of heat for weeks at a time.

A Hidden Staircase in a French Church Just Led Archaeologists Into the Middle Ages

They pulled up a church floor and found a staircase that led to 1500 years of history.

The World’s Largest Camera Is About to Change Astronomy Forever

A new telescope camera promises a 10-year, 3.2-billion-pixel journey through the southern sky.