Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Eye-wearable device can spot diabetes-related condition

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jul, 2014 08:34 AM
    Inspired by Google Glass, researchers have now developed a wearable eye-monitoring device that could lead to early detection of a common diabetes-related neurological condition.
     
    Diabetic autonomic neuropathy is common among people with both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.
     
    The new technology is a small, wearable device called a pupillometer that can hang on a pair of eye-glasses and only weighs 78 grams - slightly heavier than Google Glass.
     
    "Compared to the existing diagnostic techniques, the pupillometer is a more reliable, effective, portable and inexpensive solution for diagnosing diabetic autonomic neuropathy in its early stages," claimed lead researcher Mang Ou-Yang from National Chiao-Tung University in Taiwan.
     
    The device is designed to be worn for half an hour or so in the doctor's office, during which time it would monitor a person's pupils.
     
    By carefully measuring five parameters associated with the pupils, doctors may then be able to detect the earliest signs of diabetic autonomic neuropathy.
     
    The condition progressively affects the autonomic nerves controlling vital organs like the heart and gastrointestinal system. This can lead to problems like fainting, incontinence, nausea, heart arrhythmias and an increased risk of bacterial infection.
     
    Detecting someone's asymptomatic diabetic autonomic neuropathy early and treating it properly may lead to far better health outcomes for them.
     
    Currently, the condition is often not detected until moderate nerve damage and organ dysfunction are present.
     
    "To diagnose, doctors rely on observing changes in digestive speed, heart rate and blood pressure to detect diabetic autonomic neuropathy but this limits their ability to make a diagnosis early on," Ou-Yang added.
     
    Monitoring the pupils of people with diabetes may be a better approach, the findings, appeared in the journal Applied Optics, showed.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia
    A research has found that drugs widely used to treat lung diseases like asthma or pneumonia work better with the body clock....

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors
    Following a healthy lifestyle may lower childhood cancer survivors' risk of developing the metabolic syndrome, says a study....

    Healthy lifestyle key for childhood cancer survivors

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study
    Suffering from chest pain? Do not take it lightly for indigestion or gas pain. Better get an electrocardiogram (ECG) and blood test done to rule out the worst and avoid hospitalisation....

    ECG, blood test must for chest pain sufferers: Study

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C
    On this World Hepatitis Day, there's good news for patients, particularly from India, for those suffering from hepatitis C....

    Forget injection, pills to cure hardest-to-treat hepatitis C

    'India will take at least 40 years to eliminate leprosy'

    'India will take at least 40 years to eliminate leprosy'
    India's leprosy elimination programme has not been "successful" and it will take at least 40 years to completely eliminate the disease from the country...

    'India will take at least 40 years to eliminate leprosy'

    Device that reads sleep patterns

    Device that reads sleep patterns
    Combining information on your sleep patterns with what is going on around you, this new device will wake you up at the perfect moment....

    Device that reads sleep patterns