Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Nimmi Ramanujam Develops Handheld Device For Cancer Screening

IANS, 10 Jul, 2017 01:20 PM
    An Indian-American professor and her team have developed a new handheld, low-cost device that will soon check cervical cancer without using a painful speculum.
     
     
    Nimmi Ramanujam and her team of researchers at Duke University in North Carolina say the “pocket colposcope”, which can connect to a laptop or mobile phone, could even lead to women being able to self-screen.
     
     
    Ramanujam has developed the “all-in-one device” which resembles a pocket-sized tampon. Her team asked 15 volunteers to try the new integrated design and more than 80 per cent said they were able to get a good image.
     
     
    According to Ramanujam, “The mortality rate of cervical cancer should absolutely be zero per cent because we have all the tools to see and treat it. But it isn’t. That is in part because women do not receive screening or do not follow up on a positive screening to have colposcopy performed at a referral clinic.
     
     
    “We need to bring colposcopy to women so that we can reduce this complicated string of actions into a single touch point.”
     
     
    Ramanujam said the current standard practices for cervical cancer screening require a speculum (a metal device designed to spread the vaginal walls apart), a colposcope (a magnified telescopic device and camera designed to enable medical professionals to see the cervix), as well as a highly trained professional to administer the test.
     
     
    The device, developed with funding from the National Institutes of Health, has a colposcope design that resembles a pocket-sized tampon with lights and a camera at one end. It also includes an inserter through which the colposcope can be inserted to make the entire procedure speculum free.
     
     
    “We’ve applied for additional funding from the NIH to continue these efforts,” Ramanujam said, while noting that the team is working on regulatory clearance for the device, which they hope to receive by the end of 2017.
     
     
    Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women, with more than five lakh new cases occurring annually worldwide. In the United States, physicians diagnose more than 10,000 cases each year.
     
     
    While more than 4,000 American women die of the disease each year, the mortality rate has dropped more than 50 per cent in the past four decades, largely due to the advent of well-organised screening and diagnostic programs.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Relations With India To Continue On Upward Trajectory: US Congressman Ami Bera

    The three-term Congressman from California, Dr Bera was Co-Chair of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian-Americans for two years before he passed on the baton to Tulsi Gabbard from Hawaii early this month.

    Relations With India To Continue On Upward Trajectory: US Congressman Ami Bera

    Trump Aide On H-1B Visa: Some Americans Lack Skills For Jobs Available

    Trump Aide On H-1B Visa: Some Americans Lack Skills For Jobs Available
    Responding to questions from Senators, Acosta said that it's important to look at the issue that he highlighted about foreign workers taking American jobs.

    Trump Aide On H-1B Visa: Some Americans Lack Skills For Jobs Available

    Sushma Swaraj Wants ‘Abused’ Indian Wife Mohammadi Begum To Return From Pakistan

    Sushma Swaraj Wants ‘Abused’ Indian Wife Mohammadi Begum To Return From Pakistan
    They said Mohammadi Begum, who hails from Telangana, was living with her husband in Sialkot. She complained to her parents that she was being harassed and beaten up by her husband and in-laws and that she wanted to come back to India.

    Sushma Swaraj Wants ‘Abused’ Indian Wife Mohammadi Begum To Return From Pakistan

    Indian Sufi Clerics Blame Pakistani Newspaper For Their Troubles

    Indian Sufi Clerics Blame Pakistani Newspaper For Their Troubles
    A little-known Urdu newspaper in Pakistan had accused two Indian sufi clerics of being RAW agents thus getting them into trouble with intelligence sleuths who wanted to know the truth, the men said in Delhi on Monday.

    Indian Sufi Clerics Blame Pakistani Newspaper For Their Troubles

    Pakistan Court Orders Separate Counting Of Sikhs In Census

    Pakistan Court Orders Separate Counting Of Sikhs In Census
    A Pakistani court today ordered authorities to ensure separate counting of Sikhs in the nationwide census, after the community members filed a plea for not being counted among the religions

    Pakistan Court Orders Separate Counting Of Sikhs In Census

    Pervez Musharraf Wanted 'Secret Deal' To Form Joint Government: Nawaz Sharif

    Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said that former dictator Pervez Musharraf had offered him a "secret deal" to return to the country from exile in Saudi Arabia to form a joint government in 2008.

    Pervez Musharraf Wanted 'Secret Deal' To Form Joint Government: Nawaz Sharif