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Australia invents portable tool to visualizes blood clots as 3D holographic Livestream

22 March 2021 | News

Novel technology can measure the stickiness of the blood clot down to a single platelet in flowing blood thus improving screening and treatment of stroke, heart attack, and lung failure

Photo Credit: The Australian National University (ANU)

Photo Credit: The Australian National University (ANU)

New portable technology that visualizes clots forming in flowing blood in a 3D holographic livestream promises to dramatically improve screening and treatment of stroke, heart attack and coronavirus-induced lung failure. 

In a world-first, the biomedical invention from The Australian National University (ANU) can measure a blood clot's "stickiness" and "optically weigh" it, within a thousand millionth of a gram, to assess a person's disease risk. One can see nanoscale events happening for the first time in a clot forming before human eyes.

ANU biomedical imaging scientist and research leader Dr Steve Lee said this technology advances his team's breakthrough 2018 prototype diagnostic device in two critical ways. His multidisciplinary team has expertise in imaging sciences, medicine and biochemistry.   

"We can now measure the stickiness of the blood clot down to a single platelet and we've dramatically reduced the size of our invention so that it can fit on a small desk or bench space in a hospital or another healthcare setting," Dr Lee from the John Curtin School of Medical Research (JCSMR) said.   

The new high-speed imaging technology, known as COSI (coherent optical scattering and interferometry), revealed in experiments how individual platelets "grip and walk" along a collagen fibre under blood flow.  

"Platelets, which are a tenth of the size of a regular cell and are the major drivers of blood clot formation, move much like a circus performer walking along on a high wire. The existing imaging tools are too slow to capture single platelet actions before they clump together within seconds of being activated. COSI has a very fast and high-resolution imaging process with no labeling, so it can capture the behavior of individual platelets before they clump together. The breakthrough could be vital to study micro-blood clots in capillaries involved in lung failure related to COVID19" Dr Lee said.  

Ms Yujie Zheng, the team's lead PhD scholar, said seeing a platelet move in an orchestrated way within a developing blood clot, before suddenly freezing as she added a chemical inhibitor was a Eureka moment.   

The collaboration has already received competitive research funding totalling $1.8 million. The team's work is published in the Biophysical Journal (Cell Press)

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