Issue 3, 2003

An acoustic wave sensor incorporated with a microfluidic chip for analyzing muscle cell contraction

Abstract

We report the fabrication of a microfluidic chip or lab-on-a-chip integrated with a thickness-shear mode (TSM) acoustic wave sensor for muscle cell analysis. The sensor, essentially an AT-cut quartz crystal, serves as a detector for recording changes in acoustic wave properties occurring in an attached cardiomyocyte (single heart muscle cell) during its contraction and relaxation. Presumably, the changes resulted from alterations in viscoelastic properties (e.g. stiffness) of the cells. The effects of excitation electrode size, the presence of a microfluidic channel plate, and liquid loading on the sensor were first examined. Thereafter, muscle cell contraction analysis upon chemical stimuli were described. The potential of the chip for screening of cardiovascular drugs is discussed.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Sep 2002
Accepted
29 Jan 2003
First published
10 Feb 2003

Analyst, 2003,128, 225-231

An acoustic wave sensor incorporated with a microfluidic chip for analyzing muscle cell contraction

P. C. H. Li, W. Wang and M. Parameswaran (Ash), Analyst, 2003, 128, 225 DOI: 10.1039/B209030A

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