Skip to main contentSkip to search barSkip to navigationSkip to footer
Logo of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland
  • DE
  • EN
  • Home

Ten Schools One Goal

The FHNW comprises 10 schools with different specializations. Select a school to see its specific courses, study programmes and information.

Applied Psychology

Architecture, Construction and Geomatics

Art and Design

Music

Computer Science

Life Sciences

School of Education

Social Work

Engineering and Environment

Business

  • Study offerings

    • All degree programmes
    • Master in Life Sciences
    • Master in Medical Informatics
    • Joint Degree Master in Biomedical Engineering
    • Info events
  • About degree programmes

    • Tuition fees and scholarships
    • Digital Life Sciences
  • International

    • Outgoing Students
    • Incoming Students
    • Double Degree
    • Partner universities
    • Student stories
    • Buddy programme
    • News and stories
  • Continuing education offerings

    • All continuing educations
    • CAS - Certificate of Advanced Studies
    • Modules and Seminars
    • Info events
  • Organisation

    • Consulting services
    • Legal information and terms & conditions
  • Research

    • Research fields
    • Projects
  • Collaboration

    • Process Technology Centre
    • Services
    • Tech Transfer Office
    • Student projects
  • International

    • Study abroad
    • International research projects
  • Updates and insights

    • News and stories
    • Research highlights
  • Events

    • All events
    • Info events
  • Media corner

  • About the School of Life Sciences

    • Strategy and values
    • Management board
    • Staff
    • Advisory board
    • People directory
    • Diversity and equal opportunities
    • Media corner
    • Infrastructure and campus
  • Institutes and centres

    • Institute for Chemistry and Bioanalytics
    • Institute for Ecopreneurship
    • Institute for Medical Engineering and Medical Informatics
    • Institute for Pharma Technology and Biotechnology
    • Centre for Teaching and Learning
    • Process Technology Centre
Logo of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland
  • About the School
    • School
    • Degree Programmes
    • Continuing Education
    • Research
    • Events
  • Social Media
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
  • About FHNW
    • Organisation
    • Schools
    • Locations
    • FHNW Library
    • Media Relations
  • Support
    • IT Support
    • Inside FHNW
    • Webmail
  • Data Protection
  • Imprint
  • Accessibility
  • Study offerings

    • All degree programmes
    • Master in Life Sciences
    • Master in Medical Informatics
    • Joint Degree Master in Biomedical Engineering
    • Info events
  • About degree programmes

    • Tuition fees and scholarships
    • Digital Life Sciences
  • International

    • Outgoing Students
    • Incoming Students
    • Double Degree
    • Partner universities
    • Student stories
    • Buddy programme
    • News and stories
  • Continuing education offerings

    • All continuing educations
    • CAS - Certificate of Advanced Studies
    • Modules and Seminars
    • Info events
  • Organisation

    • Consulting services
    • Legal information and terms & conditions
  • Research

    • Research fields
    • Projects
  • Collaboration

    • Process Technology Centre
    • Services
    • Tech Transfer Office
    • Student projects
  • International

    • Study abroad
    • International research projects
  • Updates and insights

    • News and stories
    • Research highlights
  • Events

    • All events
    • Info events
  • Media corner

  • About the School of Life Sciences

    • Strategy and values
    • Management board
    • Staff
    • Advisory board
    • People directory
    • Diversity and equal opportunities
    • Media corner
    • Infrastructure and campus
  • Institutes and centres

    • Institute for Chemistry and Bioanalytics
    • Institute for Ecopreneurship
    • Institute for Medical Engineering and Medical Informatics
    • Institute for Pharma Technology and Biotechnology
    • Centre for Teaching and Learning
    • Process Technology Centre

Type a search term and search continuing education,degree programmes, events, documents and other content.

  • Life Sciences
  • News and events
  • News and Stories
  • All news and stories
All news and stories

Made to measure treatment, FHNW School of Life Sciences

12.12.2017 – School of Life Sciences, Institute for Chemistry and Bioanalytics


Measuring nutrients in the blood quickly and easily without the need to visit a doctor

  • Story

Just a few microlitres of a blood sample taken at home are enough to analyse 20 different substances. The results are sent to a mobile phone app to identify and help counteract nutrient deficiencies. The companies involved in the project are already using the new process successfully, leading to infrastructure investment and new jobs.

Personalised medicine is on everyone’s lips. It uses data from blood samples and stool analyses, from fitness trackers and patient questionnaires, with the goal of tailor-made medical treatment for each patient instead of standardised textbook therapy. The philosophy is that each person is an individual with very different habits, genetic data and microbiomes – the microorganisms that colonise them. These differences affect not only whether someone gets certain diseases but also how the body processes vitamins, trace elements and other nutrients. Thus general recommendations, such as on dietary supplements, may be ineffective since they are not tailored to the individual.

This could soon change. In an industrial partnership with Baze Labs AG and Swiss Analysis AG, researchers at the FHNW School of Life Sciences have developed a method for measuring vitamins, amino acids, trace elements and omega-3 fatty acids in a single drop of blood.

The process is simple: having received a painfree blood collection kit by post, people collect a drop of blood at home and send it to the laboratory – as often as they want. A few days later they receive an analysis via the app and a recommendation as to which nutrients they need more of. “Vitamins and trace elements play an important role in the prevention of diseases and a healthy lifestyle,”explains Götz Schlotterbeck from the Institute for Chemistry and Bioanalytics. “Many people feel the need to check them regularly.”

Schlotterbeck and his team helped the Swiss companies to develop the analysis method and program the equipment. The biggest challenge for the researchers was the tiny amount of blood available for analysis. “Unlike with conventional blood samples we’re only working with a few microlitres,” says Schlotterbeck. “One microlitre is 0.001 millilitres and it is not easy to get a robust and valid analysis from this small quantity, even with modern systems.”

Schlotterbeck and his team first investigated a solution using dried blood. Like with a blood glucose test, clients would need to prick their finger, collect a drop of blood on a card and send it back. However, this method was not as painless as they wanted.

Since the partner firm Baze initially focused on the American market, the opportunity arose for a different blood collection method: a US-approved device the size of a small computer mouse. “The device uses microneedles to draw very a small amount of blood from the upper arm totally painlessly. Customers send the device with the liquid blood back to Baze’s US site, where samples are preserved for transport then sent to Switzerland,” says the researcher. Swiss Analysis uses three analytical methods developed by Schlotterbeck’s team to determine the 20 nutrients.

“It was vital to find out which substances had the physicochemical properties to be successfully analysed in combination,” recalls the researcher. The main goal was cost efficiency; methods should be not only robust and valid but also fast. “Speed is key in analytical chemistry,” stresses Schlotterbeck. The more you can combine, the shorter the overall analysis time. This is important financially too, because determining nutrients individually as before was too expensive to be realistic for regular private healthcare use.

The complete analysis of eight vitamins, six trace elements, four amino acids and two omega fatty acids now takes less than a day. The evaluation of the results is then sent to the client via an app, co-developed by the FHNW Institute for Information Systems, along with advice on suitable dietary supplements.

Although this service is not yet available in Switzerland, the Innosuisse-supported project has already had a positive effect on the Swiss economy. In order to meet consumers’ needs, both firms involved in the project have not only invested in technical infrastructure but have also created jobs. The methods developed and tested at the FHNW were transferred to Baze and Swiss Analysis. FHNW researchers are now working with another Swiss firm to develop a new method – to analyse proteins.

Methods

  • Individualised assessment of micronutrient status
  • Fitness and nutrition markers in blood samples
  • Minimally invasive blood analysis with micro-quantity samples
  • Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM) methods

Infrastructure

  • High-performance liquid chroma- tography coupled with triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (LC-MS/MS multiplex)
  • Gas chromatography with single quadrupole mass spectrometer (GC-MS)
  • Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS)

Support

  • Innosuisse
  • Collaboration Baze Labs AG
  • Swiss Analysis AG
  • Biognosys AG

Contact

Stefan Gaugler

Prof. Dr. Stefan Gaugler

Team Leader, Instrumental Analytics
Phone
+41 61 228 50 98
E-Mail
stefan.gaugler@fhnw.ch

School of
Life Sciences FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland

  • About the School
    • School
    • Degree Programmes
    • Continuing Education
    • Research
    • Events
  • Social Media
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
  • About FHNW
    • Organisation
    • Schools
    • Locations
    • FHNW Library
    • Media Relations
  • Support
    • IT Support
    • Inside FHNW
    • Webmail
Logo FHNW - 20 Years
Logo Swiss Universities
Logo European University Association
© University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW)
  • Data Protection
  • Imprint
  • Accessibility
  • DE
  • EN