Research Article
Development of Portable Device for Monitoring the Lithium Level from Bipolar Disorder Patients
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.4108/icst.pervasivehealth.2011.246070, author={Jungho Kim and Dermot Diamond and King Tong Lau}, title={Development of Portable Device for Monitoring the Lithium Level from Bipolar Disorder Patients}, proceedings={5th International ICST Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare}, publisher={IEEE}, proceedings_a={PERVASIVEHEALTH}, year={2012}, month={4}, keywords={bipolar disorder lithium fluorescence portable device}, doi={10.4108/icst.pervasivehealth.2011.246070} }
- Jungho Kim
Dermot Diamond
King Tong Lau
Year: 2012
Development of Portable Device for Monitoring the Lithium Level from Bipolar Disorder Patients
PERVASIVEHEALTH
ICST
DOI: 10.4108/icst.pervasivehealth.2011.246070
Abstract
This research aims at developing low cost portable proactive healthcare technologies to put more control into the hands of patients especially who have mental illness so that the earliest signs of health problems with medications can be detected and corrected. Monitoring prescription drugs such as lithium, clozapine etc is important for safe guarding the well-being of the bipolar sufferers. Therapeutically useful amounts of lithium (~ 0.6 to 1.2 mmol/L) are only slightly lower than toxic amounts (>1.5 mmol/L), so the concentration of lithium must be carefully monitored during treatment to avoid toxicity. A very sensitive analytical method was proposed for the spectrofluorimetric determination of lithium base on its reaction with 1,4-dihydroxyanthraquinone (Quinizarin). The fluorescence is measured at an excitation wavelength of 590 nm and emission wavelength of 620 nm. Saliva sample was tested using the proposed portable device in order to validate the feasibility of saliva as a sample to detect lithium ions. Calibration results presented that linear range of detection was 0.25 mM ~ 6.0 mM of Li+ in saliva with R2=0.99. The range of detection covers sufficiently the therapeutic range of lithium drugs