City
Epaper

Novel device to monitor transplanted organs for early signs of rejection

By IANS | Updated: September 8, 2023 13:40 IST

New York, Sep 8 Scientists, including one of Indian-origin, have developed the first-ever electronic device that monitors the ...

Open in App

New York, Sep 8 Scientists, including one of Indian-origin, have developed the first-ever electronic device that monitors the health of transplanted organs in real time by tracking the its temperature. 

The device offers continuous monitoring by tracking the organ's temperature. When temperatures change, the device sends an alert to a smartphone or tablet in real time.

The tiny 0.3 centimetres wide device can directly be fitted on a transplanted kidney and can detect temperature irregularities associated with inflammation and other body responses that arise with transplant rejection.

"Organ temperature fluctuates over a daily cycle under normal circumstances. We observed abnormal higher frequency temperature variations occurring over periods of 8 and 12 hours in cases of transplant rejection," said Surabhi Madhvapathy, a postdoctoral researcher at Northwestern University in the US.

The device contains a highly sensitive thermometer, which can detect incredibly slight (0.004 degrees Celsius) temperature variations on the kidney and also measures blood flow, although the researchers found temperature was a better indicator of rejection.

"If rejection is detected early, physicians can deliver anti-rejection therapies to improve the patient’s health and prevent them from losing the donated organ. In worst-case scenarios, if rejection is ignored, it could be life threatening," said John A. Rogers, bioelectronics researcher at Northwestern.

"The earlier you can catch rejection and engage therapies, the better," he added.

The scientists tested the device on a small animal model with transplanted kidneys and found the device detected warning signs of rejection up to three weeks earlier than current monitoring methods.

Current transplanted organs monitoring methods are not perfect and time consuming.

The current "gold standard" for detecting rejection is a biopsy, in which a physician uses a long needle to extract a tissue sample from the transplanted organ and then analyses the sample for signs of impending rejection.

This method carries risks of multiple complications, including bleeding, infection, pain and even inadvertent damage to nearby tissues.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentBig B pauses ‘KBC’ shoot over contestant’s family emergency

CricketAuqib Nabi Dar steals show in mini auction as Delhi Capitals strengthen squad for IPL 2026

NationalTN forest department panel lays out measures to tackle human–wildlife conflict in Valparai

MumbaiMumbai: Retired Air India Officer Duped of ₹21 Lakh in Real Estate Fraud in Vakola

InternationalSouth Korea: Military sent propaganda leaflets to North Korea 23 times last year

International Realted Stories

InternationalCBI busts transnational cybercrime racket in Noida with FBI help, US Embassy hails US-India partnership

InternationalDonald Trump Slams Bondi Beach Anti-Semitic Terrorist Attack at Hanukkah Reception in White House

InternationalEAM Jaishankar meets Israeli PM Netanyahu, discusses deeper bilateral cooperation

InternationalUS federal court upholds removal order against Indian national

InternationalNuno Loureiro Dies: MIT Professor and Director Shot at Home in Massachusetts