Cell phone imaging aids health monitoring

Published: Dec. 23, 2008 at 12:55 PM

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 23 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers say cells phones could revolutionize international health monitoring.

Aydogan Ozcan, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, said cell phones using lens-free imaging could be used to monitor the condition of HIV and malaria patients or test water quality in undeveloped areas, the university said Tuesday in a release.

Ozcan has created a prototype cell phone using an imaging platform known as LUCAS -- Lensless Ultra-wide-field Cell monitoring Array -- based on shadow imaging. The technology, which can also be used in a webcam, uses a short wavelength blue light to illuminate a blood, saliva or other fluid sample. The data can then be sent to a hospital for analysis and diagnosis.

"This technology will not only have great impact in health care applications, it also has the potential to replace cytometers in research labs at a fraction of the cost," Ozcan said in a release. "A conventional flow-cytometer identifies cells serially, one at a time, whereas tabletop versions of LUCAS can identify thousands of cells in a second, all in parallel, with the same accuracy."

The findings are published online in the journal Lab on a Chip.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Last U.S. Pontiac rolls off the line (45 min)
Bacteria in cigarettes may harm health (48 min)
School closings reduce flu by 21 percent (50 min)
High salt and stroke directly linked (53 min)
Casino company files for bankruptcy (55 min)
COL BKB: Minnesota 82, Butler 73 (58 min)
COL FB: Texas 49, Texas A&M 39
fark
Inspectors make an unannounced visit to Basildon University Hospital and discover 70 dead people,...
We have our first contestant in the Thanksgiving "Set Your House On Fire While Frying A Turkey"...
Man freed after spending 30 years in prison, receives settlement and a "sorry we locked you away...
Oxymoron headline: Swimmer drowns
Photoshop theme: Inappropriate celebrity product endorsements
Rare Winston Churchill TV screen test to be shown, get more viewers than "The Jay Leno Show"