The dengue virus (DENV) infection commonly triggers threatening seasonal outbreaks all around the globe (estimated yearly infections are in the order of 100 million, combining all the viral serotypes), testifying the need for early detection to facilitate disease management and patient recovery. The laboratory-based testing procedures for detecting DENV infection early enough are challenged by the need of resourced settings that result in inevitable cost penalty and unwarranted delay in obtaining the test results due to distance-related factors with respect to the patient's location. Recognizing that the introduction of alternative extreme point-of-care technologies for early detection may potentially mitigate this challenge largely, we develop here a multiplex paper/polymer-based detection strip that interfaces with an all-in-one simple portable device, synchronizing the pipeline of nucleic acid isolation, isothermal amplification, and colorimetric analytics as well as readout for detecting all the four serotypes of dengue viruses in around 30 min from about 50 μL of human blood serum with high specificity and sensitivity. Aligned with the mandatory guidelines of the World Health Organization, the ultralow-cost test is ideal for dissemination at different community centers via a user-friendly device interface, not only as a critical surveillance measure in recognizing the potential cocirculation of the infection across regions that are hyperendemic for all four DENV serotypes but also for facilitating effective monitoring of patients infected by any one of the particular viral serotypes as well as timely administration of life-saving measures on need.
Dilute citric acid solutions were extracted with trioctylamine (TOA) in 1-decanol at ambient conditions using indigenous microfluidic setup with 0.8 mm section diameter. In these slug/segmented flow reactive extraction processes with equal flow ratios, the channel lengths were varied from 10 to 40 cm, and the flow rates used were in a spread of 10 to 60 mL/h. The extraction characteristics were analyzed in terms distribution coefficient, extraction percentage, and change in concentration of the aqueous phase. The results were compared with the literature data of conventional reactive extraction and found that the microfluidic system was performing well on the basis of residence time. Effort had also been made to present indicative results of the system performance in a nonuniform microfluidic channel provided with a number of intermittent 1.6 mm diameter expansions. It had been found that the flow in nonuniform channels can deliver higher efficiencies and distribution coefficients.
Advancements in developing antipathogenic interfaces are critical in mitigating the risk of infection spread amid the practical limitations of hygienic control in crowded and resource-limited settings. Such requirements are also extremely compelling in busy patient care centers including intensive care units where the statutory maintenance of environmental standards often appears to be impractical because of the overflooded patient loads. While advances in surface engineering have emerged with great promises to cater these needs, the underlying technological complexities appear to be prohibitive against practicable applications amid constrained technological resources. Here, we harnessed the role of unique topographical features of the skin of Ptyas mucosa (oriental rat snake), a commonly found snake species in south and southeast Asia, in terms of exhibiting supreme antifouling properties via natural inheritance, leading to pathogenic resistance. Our characterization studies unveiled that unlike the previously reported vertical pillars, hairs, and needles, arrays of horizontal denticulation, offering favorable topographical characteristics of structured roughness and hierarchical features, emerged to be responsible for exhibiting the desired functionalities. We subsequently adapted these structures with certain simplifications by biomimicking artificially engineered topologies on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surface. The resulting surfaces were proven to offer dual antimicrobial mechanisms such as resistances to adhesion or colonization of different bacteria (Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Streptococcus mutans) and facilitation for cell wall deformation and programmed cell death as evidenced by an abundance of oxidative stresses. These results opened up strategies of producing biomimetic surface textures and their effective implementation against pathogenic invasion in a plethora of applications ranging from medical implants to marine propulsion.
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