Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Book Part
    Sample Preparation Using Microfluidic Technologies for Non-Invasive Tests
    (Elsevier, 2025) Oksuz, C.; Tarim, E.A.; Ozcan, H.A.; Koc, S.; Tekin, H.C.
    The collection of a biological sample and the steps carried out to obtain the target in a sample covers the sample preparation procedures which are one of the important steps for diagnostic tests. Removing interferences in a complex sample, preventing undesirable reactions, separating, purifying, and enriching the sample are among the steps that can be applied to samples for analysis. Non-invasive tests include samples such as urine, saliva, sweat, tear, breath and are preferred because they are simple, painless, cost-effective and cause fewer complications. In traditional methods applied in clinics, most of the steps such as centrifugation, pipetting, staining, and washing are performed manually by a technician. For this reason, tests are costly, require long analysis time, and have a significant risk of contamination and manual errors. Microfluidic technologies allow automating sample collection and preparation steps by integrating many components on a single chip. Thereby, low-volume samples can be processed automatically with high efficiency and purity. In this chapter, the sample preparation methods used in microfluidic devices for non-invasive tests analyzing human samples including sweat, urine, saliva, tears, sexual samples, and other body fluids are reviewed. This information aims to facilitate the development of potential sample preparation methods and applications for non-invasive diagnostic tests. © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
  • Conference Paper
    3d Printing-Assisted Fabrication of Microfluidic Pneumatic Valves
    (IEEE, 2023) Keleş, Şeyda; Karakuzu, Betül; Tekin, Hüseyin Cumhur
    Pneumatic valves have a crucial place in the fluidic control in microfluidic systems. Pneumatic valves containing polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) membrane structures are used in microfluidic systems such as cell separation, and cell manipulation due to their flexible structure, and ease of production. This study demonstrates the rapid and straightforward fabrication of pneumatic valve structures using PDMS membranes, achieved through the utilization of 3D-printed molds. As a result of our experiments, we observed valve closure in a fluidic channel with a height of 150 μm. This closure was achieved by utilizing 400 μm × 800 μm PDMS membrane with a thickness of 66 μm positioned between the fluidic and control channels, while applying 1.5 bar of pressure to the control channel. When the pressure is removed, the opening time of the valve is only 0.02 s, and this response time allows rapid valving function. The presented valve fabrication strategy would allow easy and low-cost production of sophisticated microfluidic chips. © 2023 IEEE.
  • Conference Object
    Serum Creatinine Detection in a Microfluidic Chip Using a Smartphone Camera
    (Chemical and Biological Microsystems Society, 2022) Karakuzu, B.; Tarim, E.A.; Tekin, H.C.
    We present a microfluidic chip platform to detect serum creatinine levels using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) principle. In the platform, surface modified microfluidic channel sensitively captured target molecules from the serum sample, and then ELISA protocol was applied inside the channels. Afterward, the blue color formed as a result of the enzymatic reaction was measured via a smartphone camera. The proposed strategy allows the detection of creatinine rapidly in a minute amount of the serum samples without the need for expensive equipment. Thus, chronic kidney disease (CKD) could be monitored easily at point-of-care settings via the proposed creatinine detection strategy. © 2022 MicroTAS 2022 - 26th International Conference on Miniaturized Systems for Chemistry and Life Sciences. All rights reserved.
  • Conference Object
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 3
    Microfluidic Platform for Sorting Materials Based on Their Densities Using Magnetic Levitation
    (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2019) Yılmaz, Esra; Özçivici, Engin; Tekin, Hüseyin Cumhur
    Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) play a vital role in cancer diagnosis, prognosis and personalized medicine. However, CTCs are extremely rare in blood (i.e., down to 1-100 CTC per 1 mL human blood) and hard to isolate because of the heterogeneity of CTCs in biomarker expression. The current CTC separation and identification techniques use numerous differences between cells such as size, electric charges, density and expression of cell surface markers. However, these techniques have many limitations in terms of laborious sample preparation steps, inconsistent results caused by low specificity and efficiency and high cost. Hence, there is no standard method for isolating CTCs yet. With this study, it was aimed to fill the gap in CTC isolation and identification by proposing to develop a new method based on magnetic levitation principle, which has recently been demonstrated as a highly acceptable method for biological characterization of cells and monitoring of their cellular events. In this study, we have developed a new label-free microfluidic sorter to separate microparticles/cells based on their densities using magnetic levitation principle. Two different density microparticles (1.02 g/mL and 1.09 g/ mL) have been sorted and quantified in a continuous flow using a set of permanent magnets located in a 3D printed structure surrounding the microfluidic channel. This device can be used for rapid, low cost and label-free in-vitro diagnosis of cancer by sorting CTCs from whole blood in a high-Throughput manner. The sorted cells might further be used for downstream analysis for personalized and precision medicine. © 2019 IEEE.