Versatile, in-line optical oxygen tension sensors for continuous monitoring during kidney perfusion

Integration of physiological sensing modalities within tissue and organ perfusion systems is becoming a steadily expanding field of research, aimed at achieving technological breakthrough innovations that will expand the sites and clinical settings at which such systems can be used. This is becoming...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inSensors & diagnostics Vol. 3; no. 6; pp. 114 - 119
Main Authors Roussakis, Emmanuel, Cascales, Juan Pedro, Yoeli, Dor, Cralley, Alexis, Goss, Avery, Wiatrowski, Anna, Carvalho, Maia, Moore, Hunter B, Moore, Ernest E, Huang, Christene A, Evans, Conor L
Format Journal Article
Published 13.06.2024
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Integration of physiological sensing modalities within tissue and organ perfusion systems is becoming a steadily expanding field of research, aimed at achieving technological breakthrough innovations that will expand the sites and clinical settings at which such systems can be used. This is becoming possible in part due to the advancement of user-friendly optical sensors in recent years, which rely both on synthetic, luminescent sensor molecules and inexpensive, low-power electronic components for device engineering. In this article we report a novel approach towards enabling automated, continuous monitoring of oxygenation during ex vivo organ perfusion, by combining versatile flow cell components and low-power, programmable electronic readout devices. The sensing element comprises a 3D printed, miniature flow cell with tubing connectors and an affixed oxygen-sensing thin film material containing in-house developed, brightly-emitting metalloporphyrin phosphor molecules embedded within a polymer matrix. Proof-of-concept validation of this technology is demonstrated through integration within the tubing circuit of a transportable medical device for hypothermic oxygenated machine perfusion of extracted kidneys as a model for organs to be preserved as transplants. We report an optical oxygenation sensor technology comprising flow cell elements paired with electronic readout devices. Successful implementation in inflow and outflow oxygenation monitoring during ex vivo kidney perfusion is demonstrated.
Bibliography:https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sd00240c
Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Materials and methods (film and flow cell assembly, device characteristics, calibration and perfusion experimental setups); data processing (calibration data, sensitivity and limit of detection). See DOI
ISSN:2635-0998
DOI:10.1039/d3sd00240c