Monitor digestive issues with pocket-sized gadget to adjust food
Monitor digestive issues with pocket-sized gadget that will enable to adjust your food accordingly and avoid extra burden on stomach.
Indigestion, stomach cramps, and constipation are all signs of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a digestive condition estimated to affect people worldwide.
There is no cure, although it can be
managed with lifestyle and dietary changes. But discovering which foods trigger
a bad reaction for individuals can be a long and painstaking process. It's
expensive too — the study of six European countries found that it cost healthcare
systems between €937 ($1,087) and €2,108 ($2,445) per patient per year.
That's why Irish engineers Aonghus
Shortt and Peter Harte founded FoodMarble, a startup that has invented portable
devices, measuring just 5 centimeters squared, which test the hydrogen levels
in a person's breath -- a key signal for digestive disorders.
"Humans shouldn't be producing
hydrogen on the breath," explains Harte. It happens when food that
couldn't be digested in the small intestine moves to the large intestine where
bacteria breaks it down, in a process called fermentation. That process
releases gases, such as hydrogen or methane, that can cause pain or bloat.
FoodMarble's app has a database of
nearly 1,000 foods, broken down by ingredients that are typically hard to
digest.
FoodMarble's AIRE device, which
launched in 2018, allows users to test for hydrogen after meals, giving them
real-time feedback on what food is bad for their bodies. Readings are transmitted
via Bluetooth to the FoodMarble app, where users can log what they eat, and
over a course of weeks spot the ingredients that trigger symptoms.
'Democratizing
the technology'
Hydrogen breath tests have long been
a method for diagnosing digestive conditions like lactose intolerance and more
recently small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), says Harte. But he adds
that the technology has not been widely accessible or convenient — often
requiring multiple trips to the hospital for testing.
"By miniaturizing this, our aim
is to democratize the technology," he says. "We've got this huge
cohort of patients who just haven't had a way to overcome these difficult
conditions. Our device is easy to use and understand, it gives them hope."
The global market for IBS treatments
is also growing, expected to be worth more than $4 billion by 2028, up from $2
billion in 2020, according to a report by market research
firm Research and Markets.
FoodMarble has sold 25,000 of its
breath sensor devices and has just opened pre-orders for a new version that
also measures methane levels. They are available worldwide and cost between $190 and $260.
The FoodMarble device works similarly to a breathalyzer.
But the company, which has raised
€5.5 million ($6 million) in funding, is also looking to enter the clinical
market and its technology is currently undergoing trials at Johns Hopkins
Medicine in the US to improve the diagnosis of SIBO. Dr. Pankaj Jay Pasricha,
the professor leading the trial, says that so far, the device has outperformed
other hydrogen breath test methods.
Dr. Tara Troy, a gastroenterologist
who runs the Comprehensive Gastrointestinal Health clinic in Northbrook,
Illinois, believes that a take-home, the reusable device could be hugely beneficial
to clinicians and patients alike. FoodMarble is the only company she's heard of
providing this — although there are a handful of others, like Vivante Health,
offering a digital platform for monitoring gut health.
Doing breath tests in a clinical
setting can be logistically challenging and manpower intensive, Troy tells CNN
Business, requiring a medical assistant to take a breath sample every 15
minutes over a number of hours.
"The attraction of the
FoodMarble device is that it's not just a one-time analysis of the
breath," she says. "A person could use it multiple times to gather
multiple data points on which to make better judgment calls and assessments
about food sensitivities."
'Empowering
patients'
Troy warns that hydrogen breath
tests are not a foolproof method for diagnosing digestive problems and can
sometimes produce false negatives and positives. It is important to complement
them with other tests that can determine if a patient is suffering from more
serious conditions such as celiac or Crohn's disease.
But she says that they are hugely
valuable in offering some sort of "objective criteria" for patients
with IBS.
"I think it's very empowering
for these individuals to be able to figure things out on their own," says
Troy. The FoodMarble device "gives the patient that objective information
that helps to confirm that it is a real issue ... [and] it gives them the
opportunity to experiment with dietary factors," she adds.
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