Development of electrical powerless system for blood separation and coagulation time measurement
Introduction
To determine blood physiological status of hospitalized patients, rapid and efficient centrifugation of blood and measurement of coagulation time is vital. Unexpected and unconstrained coagulation of blood may cause blood clots during surgery, leading to serious medical complications such as thromboembolism and arteriosclerosis (1). Conversely, if the patient is given anticoagulants too early, serious problems such as massive bleeding may occur after surgery (2). Therefore, it is highly relevant to be able to determine the blood coagulation potential during the operation. However, the current way to measure the coagulation time is through blood sample analysis within cuvette (1) or using optical instruments to measure the signal of the scattered light output, and obtain the coagulation time by the maximum difference obtained (3). Although these methods may be effective, they have drawbacks which need to be overcome. Those drawbacks include the requirement to have typically large equipment that consumes a lot of energy.
Traditional mechanics can use hand-powered paper centrifuge (4), but is not very stable. Therefore, we used the concept of moment of inertia to make a finger spinner centrifuge to achieve the effect of blood separation without power.
Recent new inventions make it easy to carry and use in homecare. It measures the rate of the change, or the value, of capacitance or impedance between two electrodes situated on either sides of the microchannel (5). But this invention only observes impedance, it is not comprehensive for the factors to measure coagulation time. Thus, we combined the ideal of triboelectric effect, using the voltage difference signal generated by the friction between the solid and the fluid (6), to discuss the factors affecting the blood coagulation time, and to attempt to modify the surface of the microchannel (7) to enhance the effect and get larger signal.
The experimental process is showed in Figure 1. The developed finger spinner was used to separate the blood components, and the plasma was loaded into the sensing device by syringe for testing the coagulation time. A stable flow rate is supplied through a syringe pump into the microfluidic device. The induction electrical voltage generated by the triboelectric effect occurs when the fluid flows through the electrode, and the voltage difference between the fluid and the electrode was measured by using a voltmeter.
Methods
Fabrication of finger spinner and blood separation
We used a 3D computer aided design (CAD) to design our finger spinner. In order to allow the centrifuge tube to be embedded in the finger spinner, grooves for setting the centrifuge tubes on the rotating arms were designed (Figure 2). Figure 2A is our first design, which is a dual-arm finger spinner.
A four aim finger spinner, two for setting capillaries and two for counter weight by embedding bearing. By increasing the weight, the moment of inertia can be increased and the problem of the weight can be solved. Therefore, a four-arm finger spinner centrifuge was designed (Figure 2B). We designed two holes in the additional rotating arms to place the ball bearings to adjust the weight.
Then we used 3D printer to fabricate the finger spinner, as shown in Figure 2C and D. After polishing the surface, the ball bearing was embedded in the middle of the finger spinner. In addition, ball bearings were embedded in the rotating arms of the four-arm finger spinner to adjust the weight, as shown in Figure 3A and B.
Then we used four-arm finger spinner centrifuge to separate the blood. First, through the capillary principle, the blood is collected by capillary tube. Then we could use vaseline to close both ends of the opening site and put it into our finger spinner centrifuge. Finally, we could apply an external force to start the finger spinner centrifuge to separate the blood.
Self-powered coagulation time measurement device
A self-powered micro-channel device for measuring blood coagulation time was developed. The triboelectric effect between solid and liquid was used. The microchannel and gold electrode to form a system was designed. In the microfluidic channel, the Cytop was coated in the channel wall as a dielectric layer (Figure 4).
The sample was injected into microfluidic device with stable flow-rate. When the fluid flew through the electrode covered with Cytop, the charges were generated and accumulated at the dielectric layer. By measuring the potential difference between electrode and fluid, the properties of fluids could be determined.
In this study, we used different kinds of fluid to test, such as deionized water, glycerin with different concentrations, plasma, and plasma mixed thrombin. In the end, we collected different electrical signals by changing different viscosity to summarize the utility of the measurement wafer.
Results
The four-arm finger spinner had two additional rotating arms embedded ball bearings. It can solve the problem of enough weight, and it still can reach 1,000 rpm. After experiment test, blood could be separated in 10 minutes by the four-arm finger spinner centrifuge.
For measuring the blood coagulation time, the viscosity of fluids versus potential difference was carried out by using different volume ratio of glycerol and deionized water (Figure 5). The real-time potential difference of the human plasma mixing with thrombin in the device was achieved (Figure 6).
The results showed that when the flow-rate of 0.01 mL/min was applied, and the glycerol concentration was given from 0% to 20%, the potential differences decreased from 0.108 to 0.096 mVDC (Figure 5). When the viscosity was raised by using a higher concentration of glycerin, the voltage difference decreased. In addition, in the plasma test, we found that when we mixed plasma at pH7 with thrombin at 0.03 U/mL, the plasma began to coagulate at 3 minutes and was fully clogged in 7 minutes (Figure 6). Comparing the plasma without thrombin, the potential difference decreased dramatically, and after 7 minutes, the potential difference was stable at a low value.
Discussion
Blood-related tests used to require substantial medical resources. From the sample acquisition to the analysis, instruments such as centrifuges and blood condition analyzers are needed. These instruments are not only huge and expensive, but they also consume lots of energy. For these reasons, their use in low-resources countries is often affordable, especially outside the capital city.
In comparison to conventional blood separation methods, our finger spinner features some advantages of being cheap, easy to carry, and not consuming electricity. Although the centrifugal efficiency is not necessarily better, but it still can separate blood, providing a better choice in areas lacking medical resources.
In the measurement of the blood coagulation time, our device works by measuring the voltage difference. In terms of accuracy, the optical detection used by the blood condition analyzer may be better, but our device can reduce the blood consumption and it is faster and easy to test. Therefore, it can achieve more effective rapid detection that is crucial for the safety of surgical procedures.
Through the experiment, we demonstrate the effects on electrical signal of some coagulation-related fluid properties, so we may be able to apply the technology to other clinical test, such as PT and APTT test in the future.
Conclusions
In this study, a finger spinner centrifuge was designed to separate the blood by moment of inertia without power. In addition, a self-powered plasma coagulation time measurement device was developed by using triboelectric effect through the solid and the fluid friction. We found that the lower viscosity resulted in larger potential difference. Therefore, the coagulation time can be determined by comparing the potential difference of the plasma without the thrombin in the same flow-rate.
Acknowledgments
We would also like to thank the NEMS Research Center, National Taiwan University for facility support.
Funding: This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan under grant numbers MOST 108-2911-I-038-504, and 107-2221-E-038-018.
Footnote
Data Sharing Statement: Available at available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/ht-19-11
Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/ht-19-11). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2013). This study was approved by the institutional review board of the study hospital, and all volunteers provided informed consent before being allowed to participate (No. 20180620, 2018/06/20, TMU-Joint Institutional Review Board).
Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
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Cite this article as: Lin JC, Burnouf T, Wu YW, Fan YJ. Development of electrical powerless system for blood separation and coagulation time measurement. Health Technol 2020;4:2.