The Google lab known for working on unusual projects like self-driving
cars is crafting a contact lens that could help diabetics manage blood
sugar levels. "We're now testing a smart contact lens that's built to
measure glucose levels in tears," project co-founders Brian Otis and
Babak Parviz said Thursday in a blog post. The lens works "using a
tiny wireless chip and miniaturized glucose sensor that are embedded
between two layers of soft contact lens material," Otis and Parviz said. They
said prototypes have undergone clinical tests and talks were underway
with the US Food and Drug Administration. The project was described as
being in its early days, and partners were being sought to make the
lenses marketplace reality.
"As you can imagine, tears are hard to collect and study," the Google X lab team members said. "We
wondered if miniaturized electronics — think chips and sensors so small
they look like bits of glitter, and an antenna thinner than a human
hair — might be the way to crack the mystery of tear glucose and measure
it with greater accuracy."Prototype lenses being tested at Google X
can generate glucose readings about once a second. Researchers are
looking into integrating tiny lights that would warn when blood sugar
levels go above or below threshold levels, according to the blog post. "We've always said that we'd seek out projects that seem a bit speculative or strange," Otis and Parviz said. "At
a time when the International Diabetes Federation is declaring that the
world is 'losing the battle' against diabetes, we thought this project
was worth a shot." Google cited figures indicating that diabetes affects one in every 19 people on the planet.
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