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Scientists
have developed a new ‘biological smoke detector’ to
help protect against potential bioterrorist attacks, according to
a study published in the January 1st edition of ‘Analytical
Chemistry’, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Chemical
Society, the world's largest scientific society.
High-traffic facilities like airports,
office buildings, rail stations and sporting arenas serve hundreds
of thousands of people each day, making them particularly susceptible
to silent and invisible biological attacks. Researchers from Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory in California have now developed a
new stand-alone detector that can provide early warning to help
authorities limit exposure and start treating victims before they
show symptoms of full-blown infection.
The instrument, called the Autonomous
Pathogen Detection System, or APDS, continuously monitors the air
like a biological smoke detector. It is capable of detecting and
identifying three types of biological agents: bacteria, viruses
and toxins. The machine runs the same tests that molecular biologists
would carry out in a laboratory to detect biological agents, providing
information that is required before definitive public-health action
can be taken.
LLNL has been working on this instrument
since 1995, but this new version, tested at the US Army's Dugway
Proving Grounds in Utah, is a step-change in capability. Now, in
addition to simultaneously testing for multiple agents with protein
antibodies, the APDS also confirms positive results with a DNA test
specific for the agent. No other field system has two independent
molecular biology tests. Having two laboratory-quality tests further
reduces the probability of a false alarm and gives confidence for
effective response.

•Date:
6th January 2005 • Region: N.America •Type:
Article •Topic:
Terrorism
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