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Sepsis device.png
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Medical equipment data
Health topic Child mortality
Health classification Diagnosis
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Project data
Location New York, United States
Made No
Replicated No
OKH Manifest Download

Problem being addressed

Sepsis arises when the body's response to an infection damages its own tissues and organs. In low-resource settings, it accounts for 60-80% of all deaths. Due to underspecified symptoms, subtle symptoms, and rapid deterioration of tissue, sepsis is often diagnosed too late, and therefore treated too late.

Detailed description of the solution

This portable, non-perishable device uses fluorescence to rapidly detect a key early biomarker for sepsis, procalcitonin (PCT). Its sensors will be cheap and it will be easy to use by health care workers and parents at home. Because sepsis mortality is related to the time of diagnosis, the device will be able to detect sepsis early enough to distinguish it from ordinary bacterial infections, thus allowing for treatment, accordingly.

Designed by

  • Designed by: Lucerna, Inc, lead by Karen Wu
  • Manufacturer (if different):
  • Manufacturer location: New York, NY USA

When and where it was tested/implemented

Funding Source

Recipient of Grand Challenges Grant from Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

References

Peer-reviewed publication

Other internally generated reports

Externally generated reports

Saving Lives At Birth. (2011). Simple diagnositc device for early detection of neonatal sepsis. Retrieved December 1, 2013 from here.

Early sepsis diagnosis. Retrieved December 1, 2013 from here.

IP and copyright

Approval by regulatory bodies or standards boards

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 Caroline Soyars
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 2 pages link here
Impact 298 page views
Created January 2, 2014 by Caroline Soyars
Modified November 22, 2022 by Irene Delgado
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