DietSee Research is a pioneering approach to measuring glycerol by combining two technologies : bio-catalysis and electronics.

The electrochemical detection of glycerol offers many advantages: accuracy, rapidity, no sample processing. No laboratory equipment is required.

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DietSee Research is a pioneering approach to measuring glycerol by combining two technologies: bio-catalysis and electronics.

The electrochemical detection of glycerol offers many advantages: accuracy, rapidity, no sample processing. No laboratory equipment is required.

Contact us

Main advantages

Application in complex environments
(no pre-treatment of your samples)

Low volumes used
2 µL

Results in 6 seconds

Ability to carry out kinetic studies

Target Glycerol
Volume of sample < 2 µL
Measurement range 0 – 750 µmol/L
Resolution 5 µmol/L
Accuracy ± 6%
Measuring time 6 seconds

DietSee Research Features

DietSee biosensors offer optimal features for studies carried out on humans and animals.

No additional equipment is required.

Use for any biological fluid

DietSee biosensors are designed to measure glycerol directly on whole blood or any other biological liquid.

No pre-treatment is required.

Performance

DietSee biosensors provide performance equivalent to the colorimetric method used as the Gold Standard for glycerol detection.

DietSee Research Features

DietSee biosensors offer optimal features for studies carried out on humans and animals.

No additional equipment is required.

Target Glycerol
Volume of sample < 2 µL
Measurement range 0 – 750 µmol/L
Resolution 5 µmol/L
Accuracy ± 6%
Measuring time 6 seconds

Use for any biological fluid

DietSee biosensors are designed to measure glycerol directly on whole blood or any other biological liquid.

No pre-treatment is required.

Performance

DietSee biosensors provide performance equivalent to the colorimetric method used as the Gold Standard for glycerol detection.

DietSee Research Applications

Lipolysis monitoring
during cachexia

Drug-induced metabolic disorders

Genetic metabolic
disorders

Genetically modified
organisms

Are you interested in using DietSee Research for your research ?

Contact us