AFTERimage.jpg
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Medical equipment data
Health topic Tuberculosis
Health classification Diagnosis
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Project data
Location Massachusetts, United States
Status Commercialized
OKH Manifest Download

Problem being addressed[edit | edit source]

There is a strong need for improved laboratory diagnosis for TB. Stains such as the Ziehl-Neelsen are inaccurate, time intensive, and subject to interpretation. A new fluorescent stain called Auromine O (AuO) appears to be the future of TB microscopy, but the issue is the availability of fluorescent scopes. The AFTER LED fluorescence device is an add-on component that can be used as an attachment to most of the already available microscopes.

Detailed description of the solution[edit | edit source]

This device is an add-on to Olympus, Carl Zeiss, Nikon, Leica, and Motic microscopes that uses low-cost LEDs for fluorescent microscopy. The LEDs provide an upgrade over old technologies like mercury and xenon by allowing for significant increase in performance, lifetime, and operating costs. The device is capable of producing a full rainbow of fluorescence (up to 3 at a time), and requires a power supply to operate. It does not change the characteristics of the previous microscope and will not void warranties.

Designed by[edit | edit source]

  • Designed by: Fraen Corporation
  • Made in: Reading, Massachusetts, USA and in Italy

Funding Source[edit | edit source]

This project receives internal funding.

References[edit | edit source]

Peer-reviewed publication[edit | edit source]

Albert, H., Manabe, Y., & Lukyamuzi, G. (2010). Performance of three LED-based fluorescence microscopy systems for detection of tuberculosis in Uganda. PloS one. Link available here.

Hänscheid, T. (2008). The future looks bright: low-cost fluorescent microscopes for detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Coccidiae. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine. Link available here.

Lang, D. S., Zeiser, T., Schultz, H., Stellmacher, F., Vollmer, E., Zabel, P., & Goldmann, T. (2008). LED-FISH: Fluorescence microscopy based on light emitting diodes for the molecular analysis of Her-2/neu oncogene amplification. Diagnostic pathology, 3, 49. PDF available here.

Other internally generated reports[edit | edit source]

"Detection of Auramine O stained Mycobacterium tuberculosis by means of transmitted light LED fluorescence – a new approach." Fraen Corporation. PDF available here.

Externally generated reports[edit | edit source]

"Fluorescence LED Module & Microscope." Lab Vision Corporation Quarterly Newsletter. PDF available here.

Mazzini G, Ferrari C, Baraldo N, Mazzini M, and Angelini M. "Improvements in fluorescence microscopy allowed by high power light emitting diodes." Formatex Research Center. 2004.

IP and copyright[edit | edit source]

  • AFTER device is International Patent Pending.
  • TRANSMITTED LIGHT FLUORESCENCE MICROSCOPE AND KIT FOR ADAPTING A MICROSCOPE TO THE TRANSMITTED LIGHT FLUORESCENCE WORKING MODE

Publication Date: 13.07.2006 Application Number: PCT/IB2006/000160

  • Method of LED fluorescence

Application number 11/194,905 Publication number US 2006/0039141 A1 Filing date: Aug 1, 2005

FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Part of Global Health Medical Device Compendium
SDG SDG03 Good health and well-being, SDG09 Industry innovation and infrastructure
Authors Eva Shiu
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 3 pages link here
Impact 349 page views
Created February 13, 2012 by Eva Shiu
Modified February 23, 2024 by StandardWikitext bot
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