Ramblings of an old Doc

 

 

This non-invasive technology using extremely small nanoparticles embedded in the contact lens was developed by Chemical and Biochemical Engineering professor Jin Zhang at The University of Western Ontario.

These engineered nanoparticles react with glucose molecules found in tears, causing a chemical reaction that changes their color. The obvious limitations are how the person ‘sees’ colors and that diabetes damages the eye’s natural lens and nerve layer (the retina), so it might not be useful for all diabetics. It’s still in development and hasn’t reached human testing stages yet.

                     

Contact-lens scientist Babak Parviz at the University of Washington has developed a smart lens that measures the blood sugar levels of people with diabetes, by checking sugar levels in tears electronically. His lens has an intricate manufacturing needs an RF power source near it at this point though, and tests haven’t been done to see possible problems between it and the eye.

             

                                                                        not the actual lens

Multifunctional electronic contact lenses would possess medical abilities to monitor glucose, cholesterol, sodium, and potassium levels of the user, sending data to medical personnel for analysis through wireless data transmitters. That means all those blood tests and needle fears could be done with also, eventually. They might eventually gain vision expanding or even gaming possibilities.

These technologies have vast potential applications beyond biomedical devices, including for food packaging. For example, nanocomposite films can prevent food spoilage by preventing oxygen, carbon dioxide and moisture from reaching fresh meats and other foods, or by measuring pathogenic contamination; others can make packaging increasingly biodegradable.

 

 

Source: http://www.nano.org.uk/news/index.php?article=319

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Comments (Page 2)
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on Feb 08, 2011

Well, I'm not saying it's perfect in Australia, but at least we have bulk billing for those that need it most, and relatively cheap prescription medicine, at least for those on health care or pensioner cards.  (Although I daresay the normal price for prescriptions in Australia is quite a bit lower than for the same prescription in the US.)  And there is the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which heavily subsidises crucial medicine.

Though you can't really go past ocean-plant-based Omega 3 for greatly helping general health!   I mean, fish oil has Omega 3, but the fish only got it from other organisms in the sea, they didn't produce it themselves.   And it's easier to breed ocean-plant-organisms in labs on a massive scale than fish. (Btw: pun not intended regarding the "scale" bit.  Really, it just happened! )

Best regards,
Steven.

on Feb 08, 2011

Make sure you get the purist grade of Omega-3's Steven. If they come from fish, then there may well be lead and other heavy metals in them...in the individual fish, the levels are tolerable, but when concentrated from many fish... you get the idea.

Don't buy it unless it details the heavy metals levels, mate.

on Feb 08, 2011

Although I would hope that plant-based ocean varieties of Omega 3 would not have heavy lead.  Wanting plant-ocean-based Omega 3 rather than fish-based was not only because the fish did not produce the nutrient themselves.   I'll have to see about getting some good-quality, low-contaminant-level Omega 3.  I'll see if it's possible.

It's funny looking at your Avatar (no relation to the movie over and over again and seeing "Beam me up Scotty". (if I have my original Star Trek correct in this case )  Is he the same one who says "The engines canna take it cap'n"?

Actually, is it Scotty or Sylvester McCoy?

Best regards,
Steven.

on Feb 08, 2011

DrJBHL

That's the key. Hello! You're all connected to the internet! Look it up!

Tell that to your 80 year old aunt who is very frustrated.

DrJBHL
I'm talking about really radical developments in Biotech, for example.

I check this forum every day.  I might get to check Cnet each day as well.  I appreciate you culling the best out this way, and will continue to read it as long as you write it.

on Feb 08, 2011

 hay doc i wish thay would pull there finger out  i am tired of pricking myself 4 times a day      

 

on Feb 08, 2011

Actually, is it Scotty or Sylvester McCoy?[/quote]

It's Leonard McCoy... "Bones".

[quote who="captinmoonlight" reply="20" id="2884252"] hay doc i wish thay would pull there finger out  i am tired of pricking myself 4 times a day      

 

From your mouth to G-d's ear.

on Feb 08, 2011

Gee, that kinda shows how much I followed the Original Star Trek.

Best regards,
Steven.

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