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TB 'breathalyser' could be available in two years

Steve Connor
Monday 07 November 2011 20:00 EST
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A hand-held breathalyser for detecting tuberculosis infection could be available in prototype form within two years, scientists said.

A team of Indian scientists have won a $950,000 (£600,00) grant to build a prototype "electronic nose" by the end of 2013 which will detect the early stages of the respiratory disease, which claims nearly 1.7 million lives a year worldwide.

The TB breathalyser works by detecting the presence of about half a dozen biological chemicals in the air expelled from someone's lungs. These form a reliable signature of TB infection, said Peter Singer, chief executive of Grand Challenges Canada, with is part-funding the development with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

"The scientists have proven that patients with TB have a different signature on their breath compared with people who do not. Now they are validating it and putting it into a machine," Dr Singer said.

It is estimated up to 400,000 lives a year could be saved in the developing world by the early diagnosis and treatment of TB. Ranjan Nanda, one of the scientists in New Delhi, said: "Our goal is to make the electronic nose widely available in poor, remote areas where tuberculosis often breeds and spreads, devastating so many lives."

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