研究目的
To determine whether infrared spectroscopy could be translated to the field to diagnose the presence of Plasmodium in the blood of patients presenting at hospital with symptoms of malaria, as a precursor to trials testing the sensitivity to detect asymptomatic carriers.
研究成果
ATR-FTIR spectroscopy has the potential to be developed as an efficient and reliable malaria diagnostic tool at POC under tropical field conditions. The combination of accessibility to mass screening, high sensitivity and selectivity, low logistical requirements and portability, makes this approach a potentially outstanding tool in the context of malaria elimination programmes.
研究不足
The system relies on connectivity to a mobile telephone network or the Internet. The use of methanol to fix red blood cells is not suitable for POC malaria diagnostics using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy. The study was not designed as a test of sensitivity per se.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study employed two portable infrared spectrometers for data acquisition from methanol fixed packed red blood cells. Diagnostic modelling and validation testing was performed against the gold standard qPCR using linear and machine learning approaches.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Blood samples were acquired from 318 patients presenting with suspected malaria at four regional clinics in Thailand.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Two portable Agilent 4500 ATR-FTIR spectrometers were used.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
IR spectra were acquired over the range from 4000 to 650 cm?1 at a spectral resolution of 4 cm?
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Multivariate data analysis methods were employed to reveal changes in the spectra produced by variations in the biochemical composition associated with the presence of Plasmodium.
独家科研数据包,助您复现前沿成果,加速创新突破
获取完整内容