Sunday, 19 January 2014

Google X developing smart contact lens

Here is good news for diabetes patients now they can keep track with their sugar level without pricking their fingers and drawing blood up to 10 times daily. Google brings another wearable aye device, Soft contact lens that can detect glucose level in tears.
The latest project to come out the Google X lab is a smart contact lens, the company unveiled in official blog post. It is one of the few ways to make glucose monitoring for diabetic patients more convenient and less invasive.

The lens uses a small glucose sensor and a wireless transmitter to keep an eye on the blood sugar levels and adjust the dose of insulin required help those among the world's 382 million diabetics who need insulin keep a close watch on their blood sugar and adjust their dose.
Sandwiched in this lens are two twinkling glitter-specks loaded with tens of thousands of miniaturized transistors. It's ringed with a hair-thin antenna. Together these remarkable miniature electronics can monitor glucose levels in tears of diabetics and then wirelessly transmit them to a handheld device. Google is hoping to add tiny LED lights to it that could flash if glucose levels aren't what they should be.
Google says prototype will take at least five years to reach consumers. We can imagine about that time when this will equipped with mobile apps and will be easier to keep track about health.
Google X project leader for the smart contact lens, Brain Otis said that "We're testing a smart contact lens that we built that measures the glucose levels in tears using a tiny wireless chip and a miniaturised glucose sensor,"
During years of soldering hair-thin wires to miniaturize electronics, Otis burned his fingertips so often that he can no longer feel the tiny chips he made from scratch in Google's Silicon Valley headquarters, a small price to pay for what he says is the smallest wireless glucose sensor ever made.
"We've had to work really hard to develop tiny, low-powered electronics that operate on low levels of energy and really small glucose sensors," Mr Otis said at Google's Silicon Valley headquarters.
In fact, the contact lens isn’t the only device created in attempt to facilitate the lives of millions of diabetics. A similar contact lens by Netherlands-based NovioSense is a work in progress. Also, Israel-based OrSense has already tested a thumb cuff. Finally, early designs for special tattoos and saliva sensors have been presented.
One gadget, a wristwatch monitor, was approved by the FDA in 2001, but patients complained that low-level electric currents taking fluid from their hands was a painful process, and the device demonstrated some errors as well.
"It doesn't look like much, but it was a crazy amount of work to get everything so very small," he said before the project was unveiled Thursday. The embedded electronics in the lens do not obscure vision because they lay outside the pupil and iris.
It took years of soldering hair-thin wires to miniaturise electronics, essentially building tiny chips from scratch, to make what Google said is the smallest wireless glucose sensor ever made.
The contact lenses were developed during the past 18 months in the Google X lab that also came up with a driverless car. Research on the contact lenses began several years earlier at the University of Washington, where scientists worked under National Science Foundation funding. Until Thursday, when Google shared the project, their work had been kept under wraps.
Currently, 382 million people have diabetes, and by 2035 that number will rise to 592 million, according to International Diabetes Federation. Eighty percent of people with diabetes live in low- and middle-income countries, and most of them are between 40 and 59 years old.

"We're still really early on. We're confident about how the technology is going so far. But there's a huge amount of work left to do," Mr Otis said.

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