High-performance blood plasma separation based on a Janus membrane technique and RBC agglutination reaction
Separation of plasma which is full of various biomarkers is critical for clinical diagnosis. However, the point-of-care plasma separation often relies on microfluidic filtration membranes which are usually limited in purity, yield, hemolysis, extraction speed, hematocrit level, and protein recovery....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Lab on a chip 2022-11, Vol.22 (22), p.4382-4392 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Separation of plasma which is full of various biomarkers is critical for clinical diagnosis. However, the point-of-care plasma separation often relies on microfluidic filtration membranes which are usually limited in purity, yield, hemolysis, extraction speed, hematocrit level, and protein recovery. Here, we have developed a high-performance plasma membrane separation technique based on a Janus membrane and red blood cell (RBC) agglutination reaction. The RBC agglutination reaction can form larger RBC aggregates to separate plasma from blood cells. Then, the Janus membrane, serving as a multipore microfilter to block large RBC aggregates, allows the plasma to flow from the hydrophobic side to its hydrophilic side spontaneously. As a result, the separation technique can extract highly-purified plasma (99.99%) from whole blood with an ultra-high plasma yield (∼80%) in ∼80 s. Additionally, the separation technique is independent of the hematocrit level and can avoid hemolysis.
A high-performance plasma separation technique is reported to separate plasma from whole blood (hematocrit level: 15-85%) with an ultra-high plasma yield (∼80%) and purity (99.99%) in ∼80 s. |
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ISSN: | 1473-0197 1473-0189 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d2lc00508e |