
A tiny machine to predict heart attacks
Imagine if all heart patients could regularly test themselves and predict heart attacks before they occur. That鈥檚 the vision Patricia Nieva is working toward.
Imagine if all heart patients could regularly test themselves and predict heart attacks before they occur. That鈥檚 the vision Patricia Nieva is working toward.
By Staff Communications & Public AffairsFor 70,000 Canadians each year, a heart attack can mean the difference between life and death. But imagine there was a machine capable of predicting them minutes, hours or even days before symptoms appear. A machine so small and affordable, every potential coronary patient would have one.
Now imagine the lives that technology could save.
,听a professor in mechanical and mechatronics engineering, is leading an international multidisciplinary team to build . She already has a hospital lined up for the clinical testing and a company interested in commercializing the technology within five years.
The key will be biological micro-electro-mechanical systems: BioMEMS.
These tiny devices:
The device would share similarities with hand-held diabetes monitors that take a single drop of blood from a finger prick. But Nieva鈥檚 monitor would then measure specific proteins and enzymes, and give an instant read-out. That information could even report wirelessly to the doctor.
鈥淚f we can get this right, it will save a lot of lives,鈥 says Nieva, who directs the , where MEMS devices can be designed, prototyped, and tested. 鈥淓veryone can see the potential here. It sounds incredible, but it鈥檚 not that far away.鈥
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