1 research outputs found
Identification and Quantification of Intravenous Therapy Drugs Using Normal Raman Spectroscopy and Electrochemical Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy
Errors
in intravenous (IV) drug therapies can cause human harm
and even death. There are limited label-free methods that can sensitively
monitor the identity and quantity of the drug being administered.
Normal Raman spectroscopy (NRS) provides a modestly sensitive, label-free,
and completely noninvasive means of IV drug sensing. In the case that
the analyte cannot be detected within its clinical range with Raman,
a label-free surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) approach can
be implemented to detect the analyte of interest. In this work, we
demonstrate two individual cases where we use NRS and electrochemical
SERS (EC-SERS) to detect IV therapy analytes within their clinically
relevant ranges. We implement NRS to detect gentamicin, a commonly
IV-administered antibiotic and EC-SERS to detect dobutamine, a drug
commonly administered after heart surgery. In particular, dobutamine
detection with EC-SERS was found to have a limit of detection 4 orders
of magnitude below its clinical range, highlighting the excellent
sensitivity of SERS. We also demonstrate the use of hand-held Raman
instrumentation for NRS and EC-SERS, showing that Raman is a highly
sensitive technique that is readily applicable in a clinical setting