Noble metal-containing compound detection by catalysis of optical dye reduction
US-2024377333-A1 · Nov 14, 2024 · US
US11397152B1 · US · B1
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11397152-B1 |
| Application number | US-201916352627-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B1 |
| Filing date | Mar 13, 2019 |
| Priority date | Sep 30, 2015 |
| Publication date | Jul 26, 2022 |
| Grant date | Jul 26, 2022 |
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Methods of measuring attributes of animal urine, using a test pad comprising multiple test patches and urine detection patches in a BAYER pattern is described. The pad comprises different test patches, each surrounded by urine detection patches. When a camera, electronics and software automatically detect fresh urine from a color change of a detection patch, nearby test patches are read with a color camera, after a specific time delay, and compared to color reference spots. Multiple layers and isolation zones in the test pad allow urine to enter the test and detection patches, while keeping urine puddles from spreading. Once used, detection and test patches are not used again. An array of many detection and test patches allows the test pad to be used for multiple urine samples in one vivarium cage before replacing. Embodiments use a mix of IR and white light, and IR cameras and color cameras.
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What is claimed is: 1. A method for measuring attributes of urine comprising the steps: (i) placing a urine pad in a vivarium cage comprising an animal identification element; wherein the urine pad comprises: (a) a test patch layer comprising a plurality of different urine test patches, each different urine test patch comprising one or more respective urine test chemicals that change color responsive to a respective urine attribute; and (b) a plurality of urine detection patches, wherein the urine detection patches are different from any urine test patch, and wherein each urine detection patch comprises one or more chemicals that change color responsive to presence of urine; and wherein each different urine test patch is at least partially surrounded by one of more of the urine detection patches; (ii) detecting, via a first camera, first fresh animal urine responsive to the urine detection patches; (iii) identifying a first animal that produced the first fresh urine of step (ii) responsive to the animal identification element; (iv) reading, via a second camera, a first plurality of urine test patches; (v) recording first test results from step (iv); wherein the first and second cameras may be the same camera. 2. The method of claim 1 comprising the additional steps of: (vi) recording the locations of the urine test patches in the first plurality of urine test patches, from step (iv); (vii) repeating steps (ii) through (v) for detecting additional fresh urine; identifying a second animal that produced the additional fresh urine; reading additional, unused urine test patches; and recording additional test results; wherein the second animal may be the same as the first animal. 3. The method of claim 1 comprising the additional steps of: (viii) reading via the first camera the state of a set of urine detection patches wherein the set comprises all urine detection patches proximal to a first urine test patch; (ix) recording or rejecting a test result from the first urine test patch responsive to the states of the urine detection patches in the set. 4. The method of claim 1 comprising the additional steps of: (x) starting a first timer responsive to the detecting in step (ii); (xi) delaying the reading in step (iv) until the expiration of the first timer. 5. The method of claim 1 wherein: the vivarium cage further comprises an IR light source and an IR camera; wherein the detecting in step (ii) is performed using the IR light source and the IR camera. 6. The method of claim 1 wherein: the vivarium cage further comprises a white light source and a color camera; wherein the reading step (iv) is performed using the white light source and the second camera; wherein the second camera is the color camera. 7. The method of claim 1 comprising the additional steps of: (xii) starting a first timer responsive to the detecting in step (ii); (xiii) delaying the reading in step (iv) until the expiration of the first timer; wherein the vivarium cage further comprises an IR light source and an IR camera; wherein the detecting in step (ii) is performed using the IR light source and the first camera, which is an IR camera; wherein the vivarium cage further comprises a white light source and the second camera is a color camera; and wherein the reading step (iv) is performed using the white light source and the second camera; and wherein the white light source is turned on after the expiration of the first timer, before the reading in step (iv), and turned off after the reading in step (iv). 8. The method of claim 7 comprising the additional step of: (xiv) observing the location in the vivarium cage of the first animal and blocking the turning on the white light source if the location of the first animal, at the expiration of the first timer, is less than a predetermined distance from the pad. 9. The method of claim 1 wherein: the vivarium cage further comprises a stimulation element adapted to stimulate the first animal to move; and the method comprises the further step of: (xv) turning on the stimulation element after detecting in step (ii) and before the reading in step (iv). 10. The method of claim 1 comprising the additional steps of: (xvi) reading via the camera color a plurality of color reference spots, wherein the second camera is a color camera; (xvii) comparing the read urine test patches in step (iv) with the read color reference spots in step (xiv); and (xviii) determining test results responsive to the comparing in (xvii); wherein the color reference spots are in the vivarium cage; wherein the reading step (xvi) may be prior to step (ii) or between steps (iv) and (v) and the comparing step (xvii is after step (iv). 11. The method of claim 10 wherein: the reading step (xvi) is between steps (iv) and (v). 12. The method of claim 1 wherein: the method may perform the identifying step (iii) either prior to step (ii), or between steps (ii) and (iv), or after step (iv), wherein the method dynamically determines which of these three order options each time the method is performed. 13. A system of measuring attributes of urine of animals in a vivarium comprising: a plurality of vivarium cages in the vivarium; one or more computers running software performing the method of claim 1 .
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