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      Disposable Sensors in Diagnostics, Food, and Environmental Monitoring

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          Multifunctional wearable devices for diagnosis and therapy of movement disorders.

          Wearable systems that monitor muscle activity, store data and deliver feedback therapy are the next frontier in personalized medicine and healthcare. However, technical challenges, such as the fabrication of high-performance, energy-efficient sensors and memory modules that are in intimate mechanical contact with soft tissues, in conjunction with controlled delivery of therapeutic agents, limit the wide-scale adoption of such systems. Here, we describe materials, mechanics and designs for multifunctional, wearable-on-the-skin systems that address these challenges via monolithic integration of nanomembranes fabricated with a top-down approach, nanoparticles assembled by bottom-up methods, and stretchable electronics on a tissue-like polymeric substrate. Representative examples of such systems include physiological sensors, non-volatile memory and drug-release actuators. Quantitative analyses of the electronics, mechanics, heat-transfer and drug-diffusion characteristics validate the operation of individual components, thereby enabling system-level multifunctionalities.
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            Miniaturized total chemical analysis systems: A novel concept for chemical sensing

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              Lateral flow (immuno)assay: its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. A literature survey.

              Lateral flow (immuno)assays are currently used for qualitative, semiquantitative and to some extent quantitative monitoring in resource-poor or non-laboratory environments. Applications include tests on pathogens, drugs, hormones and metabolites in biomedical, phytosanitary, veterinary, feed/food and environmental settings. We describe principles of current formats, applications, limitations and perspectives for quantitative monitoring. We illustrate the potentials and limitations of analysis with lateral flow (immuno)assays using a literature survey and a SWOT analysis (acronym for "strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats"). Articles referred to in this survey were searched for on MEDLINE, Scopus and in references of reviewed papers. Search terms included "immunochromatography", "sol particle immunoassay", "lateral flow immunoassay" and "dipstick assay".
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Advanced Materials
                Adv. Mater.
                Wiley
                0935-9648
                1521-4095
                May 15 2019
                May 15 2019
                : 1806739
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of BioengineeringImperial College LondonRoyal School of Mines SW7 2AZ London UK
                [2 ]University of FreiburgFreiburg Center for Interactive Materials and Bioinspired Technologies (FIT) 79110 Freiburg Germany
                [3 ]Laboratory for SensorsDepartment of Microsystems Engineering (IMTEK)University of Freiburg 79110 Freiburg Germany
                [4 ]REQUIMTE/LAQVInstituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto 4249‐015 Porto Portugal
                [5 ]Departamento de Química Física y AnalíticaUniversidad de Oviedo 33006 Oviedo Spain
                [6 ]Catalan Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (ICN2)CSIC and The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology 08193 Barcelona Spain
                [7 ]ICREA 08010 Barcelona Spain
                [8 ]Korea Institute of Science and Technology in Europe 66123 Saarbrücken Germany
                [9 ]University of FreiburgFreiburg Materials Research Center (FMF) 79104 Freiburg Germany
                Article
                10.1002/adma.201806739
                31094032
                5a04a6c5-f3f3-42d9-8222-1df65a082a42
                © 2019

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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