This story first appeared in CNN Money.
Google is developing smart contact lenses that measure the glucose levels in diabetics' tears.
If
successful, Google's newest venture could help to eliminate one of the
most painful and intrusive daily routines of diabetics.
People
with diabetes have difficulty controlling the level of sugar in their
blood stream, so they need to monitor their glucose levels -- typically
by stabbing themselves with small pin pricks, swabbing their blood onto
test strips and feeding them into an electronic reader.
Google's smart contacts could potentially make blood sugar monitoring far less invasive.
The
prototype contacts are outfitted with tiny wireless chips and glucose
sensors, sandwiched between two lenses. They are able to measure blood
sugar levels once per second, and Google is working on putting LED
lights inside the lenses that would flash when those levels are too low
or high.
The electronics in the lens are so small that they
appear to be specks of glitter, Google said. The wireless antenna is
thinner than a human hair.
They're still in the testing phase and not
yet ready for prime time. Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) has run clinical
research studies, and the company is in discussions with the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration.
Diabetes is a chronic problem, affecting about one in 19 people across the globe and one in 12 in the United States.
The
smart contacts are being developed in Google's famous Google X labs, a
breeding ground for projects that could solve some of the world's
biggest problems. Google X labs is also working on driverless cars and
balloons that transmit Wi-Fi signals to remote areas.
Google's
contact lens project isn't the first attempt at building the technology.
For many years, scientists have been investigating whether other body
fluids, including tears, could be used to help people measure their
glucose levels. In 2011, Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) partnered with
the University of Washington to build contact lenses with small radios
and glucose sensors.