Search
Menu
Excelitas PCO GmbH - Industrial Camera 11-24 VS LB

An End to Bloodletting?

Facebook X LinkedIn Email
Michael D. Wheeler, News Editor

Each day millions of diabetics perform a ritual, stabbing their fingers with a metal lancet to draw a few drops of blood. After the blood is placed on a test strip, a machine reads the strip and provides a reading in about half a minute.

The discomfort and inconvenience of this finger pricking has led many diabetics to neglect testing -- putting them at risk for serious health problems, including kidney failure, stroke and blindness. It comes as no surprise, then, that many health care providers have sought a less invasive way to test glucose levels. A competitively priced, accurate test would likely capture a significant share of the estimated $2 billion to $3 billion annual glucose monitoring market in the US. And such a test could go a long way in alleviating the $92 billion strain that the American Diabetes Association estimates the disease puts on the US, factoring in treatment costs and lost wages.

For nearly a decade, photonics technology has been behind the hope -- and the hype -- in noninvasive testing. Some companies are working to harness IR wavelengths for reading blood glucose levels. Others are designing systems that are semi-invasive.
Hamamatsu Corp. - Mid-Infrared LED 11/24 MR

Published: August 1999
Features

We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our Privacy Policy. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies unless you have disabled them.