Recent Progress in Optical Sensors for Biomedical Diagnostics

Micromachines (Basel). 2020 Mar 30;11(4):356. doi: 10.3390/mi11040356.

Abstract

In recent years, several types of optical sensors have been probed for their aptitude in healthcare biosensing, making their applications in biomedical diagnostics a rapidly evolving subject. Optical sensors show versatility amongst different receptor types and even permit the integration of different detection mechanisms. Such conjugated sensing platforms facilitate the exploitation of their neoteric synergistic characteristics for sensor fabrication. This paper covers nearly 250 research articles since 2016 representing the emerging interest in rapid, reproducible and ultrasensitive assays in clinical analysis. Therefore, we present an elaborate review of biomedical diagnostics with the help of optical sensors working on varied principles such as surface plasmon resonance, localised surface plasmon resonance, evanescent wave fluorescence, bioluminescence and several others. These sensors are capable of investigating toxins, proteins, pathogens, disease biomarkers and whole cells in varied sensing media ranging from water to buffer to more complex environments such as serum, blood or urine. Hence, the recent trends discussed in this review hold enormous potential for the widespread use of optical sensors in early-stage disease prediction and point-of-care testing devices.

Keywords: bioluminescence; biomedical diagnostics; biosensors; ellipsometry; evanescent wave; light addressable potentiometric sensors; optical sensors; reflectometric interference spectroscopy; surface enhanced Raman scattering; surface plasmon resonance.

Publication types

  • Review