Interface‐Stabilized Fiber Sensor for Real‐Time Monitoring of Amniotic Fluid During Pregnancy
Diseases in pregnancy endanger millions of fetuses worldwide every year. The onset of these diseases can be early warned by the dynamic abnormalities of biochemicals in amniotic fluid, thus requiring real‐time monitoring. However, when continuously penetrated by detection devices, the amnion is pron...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advanced materials (Weinheim) 2024-02, Vol.36 (6), p.e2307726-n/a |
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Zusammenfassung: | Diseases in pregnancy endanger millions of fetuses worldwide every year. The onset of these diseases can be early warned by the dynamic abnormalities of biochemicals in amniotic fluid, thus requiring real‐time monitoring. However, when continuously penetrated by detection devices, the amnion is prone to loss of robustness and rupture, which is difficult to regenerate. Here, an interface‐stabilized fiber sensor is presented for real‐time monitoring of biochemical dynamics in amniotic fluid during pregnancy. The sensor is seamlessly integrated into the amnion through tissue adhesion, amniotic regeneration, and uniform stress distribution, posing no risk to the amniotic fluid environment. The sensor demonstrates a response performance of less than 0.3% fluctuation under complex dynamic conditions and an accuracy of more than 98% from the second to the third trimester. By applying it to early warning of diseases such as intrauterine hypoxia, intrauterine infection, and fetal growth restriction, fetal survival increases to 95% with timely intervention.
An interface‐stabilized electrochemical fiber sensor is designed for real‐time monitoring of biochemical dynamics in amniotic fluid during pregnancy. The sensor seamlessly integrates into the amnion through tissue adhesion, amniotic regeneration, and uniform stress distribution. The sensor demonstrates response performance with fluctuation of less than 0.3% under complex dynamic conditions and accuracy of more than 98% in pregnant rats. |
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ISSN: | 0935-9648 1521-4095 |
DOI: | 10.1002/adma.202307726 |