NoseToDiagnose
Winner: 2021 Analytical Division Horizon Prize:
Robert Boyle Prize for Analytical Science
For a novel approach to early Parkinson’s disease diagnosis and stratification using a simple non-invasive skin swab.
Celebrate NoseToDiagnose
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The NoseToDiagnose team has shown it is possible to identify Parkinson’s disease based on compounds found on the surface of skin. The findings offer hope that a pioneering new test could be developed to diagnose the degenerative condition through a simple painless skin swab.
Parkinson's disease is a condition in which parts of the brain become progressively damaged over many years, resulting in a range of physical and psychological symptoms. This team, led by scientists at The University of Manchester, have developed a technique which works by analysing compounds found in sebum (the oily substance that coats and protects the skin) to identify changes in people with Parkinson’s disease. Sebum is rich in lipid-like molecules and is one of the lesser studied biological fluids in the diagnosis of the condition.
Read moreWe say we are led by the nose and we are, although all of this has been a route to exploring sebum which has been tremendously exciting because we believe sebum traps compounds. From the smell of new-born babies to the scent of second-hand clothes, we all have a knowledge that sebum has a smell or can trap smells, but Joy was the person who made us realise that this could be useful. When you think of it like that – you wonder why no one thought of it before.