New Device May Diagnose Sepsis in Less Than a Drop of Blood
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), each year, sepsis affects over 30 million people around the world.
Sepsis may also lead to around 6 million deaths each year.
To prevent sepsis from evolving into septic shock — a complication that makes premature death more likely — doctors have to diagnose it early and act on it quickly.
Yet current diagnostic methods are often symptomatic, combined with tests checking for general markers of infection or organ damage.
Also, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) note, “Many of the signs and symptoms of sepsis, such as fever and difficulty breathing, are the same as in other conditions, making sepsis hard to diagnose in its early stages.”
Researchers have been looking for quicker, more effective ways of diagnosing sepsis. This has included trying to develop devices that would pick up on the presence of biomarkers for sepsis in a person’s blood.
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