“I’ve become pretty good at looking at my inner ear,” Erik Douglas grins. You could be forgiven for thinking this is a contortionist showing off his latest skills, even as you wonder just how that would be possible. Then, Douglas deftly snaps on a small conical plastic piece to the back of his iPhone case and inserts it into his ear. On the screen, facing us, pops up a circular image of a pale, stretched membrane — it’s his ear drum. “This is what a healthy ear drum looks like — I’ve also become an expert on healthy and unhealthy ears,” he says.
Cellscope’s next device planned is a dermascope, which can magnify skin lesions, moles and rashes. It is still in development, but as an extension of the same technology platform, perhaps it and other extensions — for the eyes and throat, among others — won’t face the same hurdles the otoscope did. At the Berkeley lab, Fletcher, too, is working on mobile-based diagnosis of tuberculosis, blood diseases and oral cancer, apart from sputum analysis and an ophthalmoscope. “My hope is that what we are working on currently are devices that Cellscope or others can commercialise,” says Fletcher. “As academics, we need to do sufficient R&D to show that the technology platform is robust enough and then the companies need to decide in which area the market is most accepting of such diagnostic screening.”