GLUCOSE MONITORING TATTOOS
You thought tattoos were just for punk rockers and Harley Davidson fans? Think again. Heather Clark PhD, associate director of pharmaceutical sciences at Northeastern University in Boston, has developed a tattoo that can monitor your blood sugar without constant needle pricks—a huge advancement for the 26 million Americans with diabetes.
The miniature tattoo—only a few millimeters in size—is made of nanosensors: tiny polymer beads containing a yellow-orange dye that lights up when glucose levels are high and darkens when glucose levels drop. While traditional tattoos permanently stain the deeper layers of the skin, the diabetes tattoo is applied to more superficial skin layers, so its application is less painful and it wears off over time.
“The plan is to have tattoos applied once a week,” says Clark. Patients will use a handheld device to scan the tattoo several times a day for color changes to guide their insulin use.
Clark’s team has tracked glucose levels in tattooed mice with diabetes, confirming these results with blood tests they took at the same time. If upcoming clinical trials in humans pan out, the tattoos could be on the market in a decade.