“…Over the past years, the drawbacks of conventional flow cytometers have encouraged efforts to take advantage of microfabrication technologies and advanced microfluidics to achieve smaller, simpler, more innovative and low-cost instrumentation with enhanced portability for on-site measurements. This miniaturization approach has in general made use of inexpensive polymers such as polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) [18] and detection techniques easily integrated with electronics [19], such as optical fibers [20], CCD cameras [21], diode lasers [22,23], PIN photodiodes [24], electrodes [25] and magnetoresistive sensors [26]. Approaches such as label-free electrical impedance-based ones [27,28], while quantitative and high throughput, present high sensitivity to the sample matrix, being affected by components in the sample other than the target, specifically their charges, which greatly hinders these devices' use in off-laboratory locations.…”