Do you want to know how stressed you are? Passes the dental floss

Do you want to know how stressed you are? Passes the dental floss

By Dr. Kyle Muller

There is a device to measure how much you are stressed: a kind of dental floss that, passed on the gums, detects cortisol levels.

The engineers of the Tufts University of Medford (USA) invented a special interdental floss capable of precisely measuring cortisol levels, the stress hormone. The device resembles a common fork for dental hygiene, with a thread stretched between two tips that extend from the plastic handle. The saliva is collected by capillarity through a very narrow channel in the wire, arriving in the handle where electrodes are hidden that detect cortisol.

Why cortisol? Monitoring is important because stress can lead to an increase in blood pressure, cardiovascular diseases, weakening of the immune system, depression and anxiety.

Estrogen and glucose. The device, the engineers say, can also be used to detect other molecules in saliva, such as estrogen for the monitoring of fertility, glucose for diabetes monitoring or some tumor markers.

Kyle Muller
About the author
Dr. Kyle Muller
Dr. Kyle Mueller is a Research Analyst at the Harris County Juvenile Probation Department in Houston, Texas. He earned his Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from Texas State University in 2019, where his dissertation was supervised by Dr. Scott Bowman. Dr. Mueller's research focuses on juvenile justice policies and evidence-based interventions aimed at reducing recidivism among youth offenders. His work has been instrumental in shaping data-driven strategies within the juvenile justice system, emphasizing rehabilitation and community engagement.
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