A UT Dallas study supports Allen-based EnLiSense’s approach to circadian health monitoring, via a wearable that directly measures biochemical markers tied to wakefulness and sleep.
A North Texas biotech company, working with researchers at the University of Texas at Dallas, has demonstrated a wearable sensor that measures key sleep-related hormones through sweat, offering a new approach to monitoring circadian health beyond today’s consumer wearables.
UT Dallas bioengineers partnered with Allen-based EnLiSense to evaluate the company’s CORTI wearable platform, a perspiration-based electrochemical sensor that continuously monitors cortisol and melatonin, two hormones that regulate the body’s sleep-wake cycle. The results were published in the October issue of Biosensors and Bioelectronics: X, marking the first study to demonstrate circadian rhythmicity of both hormones measured through sweat… Continue reading.
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