Peritonitis is a common complication for patients with end-stage renal disease undergoing peritoneal dialysis (PD) and is a direct cause or contributor in >15% deaths in PD patients. Since early detection is key to treatment, patients and their care teams need rapid, on-site diagnostics. A hydrogelbased peritoneal fluid pH sensor attached to a peritoneal dialysis catheter is developed to measure local acidosis indicative of peritoneal infections for early detection and monitoring of infections using X-ray imaging. The sensor comprises a polyacrylic acid hydrogel with embedded radiopaque markers enclosed in a polymer casing; contraction of the hydrogel in response to acidic pH is evident from the radiographically measured marker position. The sensor has a pH 4-8 response range; between pH 6.5 and 7.5 it responds linearly with a slope of 14% pH 7 length per pH unit, and about 1% length precision. The sensor is attached to a catheter and implanted in a rat peritoneum. Results in awake rats show a rapid pH drop during infection not observed in systemic C-reactive proteins (CRP) levels nor in the uninfected control animal, with negligible drift over 2 weeks. To our knowledge, this is the first report of an in vivo chemically responsive hydrogel sensor.
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