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Last Updated: Apr 25, 2025 | Study Period: 2024-2030
Wearable technology has advanced thanks to smart electronics based on microcontrollers, sometimes known as fashion electronics. In order to enable the wearer's instantaneous biofeedback in direct touch with the body surface, these devices may process physiological data.
Wearable technology available off the shelf picks up observable characteristics like skin conductivity or gestures. A biomarker must be in close contact with both a biorecognition element and an electrode surface in order for the technology based on electrochemical biosensors to work. The skin is one of the most popular target tissues for real-time monitoring since wearable equipment must be noninvasive.
For some analytes, such as a number of proteins and hormones, noninvasive biosensor formats might not be accessible, particularly when equipment is mounted cutaneously to monitor in sweat. The solute concentration of sweat is heavily regulated by processes such cutaneous transcytosis, paracellular cell-cell unions, and even reuptake.
In light of the discussed release of regulatory mechanisms to the sweat, this review highlights recent developments on wearable devices based on electrochemical biosensors for biomarkers with a complex blood-to-sweat partition, such as proteins and certain hormones. It describes the difficulties in designing wearable epidermal biosensors (WEBs) as well as potential solutions.
The Global Wearable Electrochemical Alcohol Biosensor market accountedfor $XX Billion in 2023 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2024 to 2030.
Numerous effective monitoring applications for various target analytes have emerged as a result of the wearable sensor platforms' rapid development in recent years. The accurate on-body detection and continuous monitoring of alcohol has become a focus of many such systems because it is a significant biomarker with substantial impact in a variety of domains.
There are currently a number of commercial sensing platforms that can detect alcohol consumption transdermally utilising insensible perspiration. Due to limitations of currently available platforms that use this sensing technique, wearable biosensors that can detect alcohol in biofluid samples including sensible perspiration and skin interstitial fluid in real time are being developed.
This study addresses the latest developments in wearable electrochemical alcohol biosensing and focuses on recent trends that have led to continuous, real-time alcohol consumption monitoring. A viewpoint on this crucial area is provided together with predictions for the development of wearable electrochemical alcohol biosensors.
Sl no | Topic |
1 | Market Segmentation |
2 | Scope of the report |
3 | Abbreviations |
4 | Research Methodology |
5 | Executive Summary |
6 | Introduction |
7 | Insights from Industry stakeholders |
8 | Cost breakdown of Product by sub-components and average profit margin |
9 | Disruptive innovation in the Industry |
10 | Technology trends in the Industry |
11 | Consumer trends in the industry |
12 | Recent Production Milestones |
13 | Component Manufacturing in US, EU and China |
14 | COVID-19 impact on overall market |
15 | COVID-19 impact on Production of components |
16 | COVID-19 impact on Point of sale |
17 | Market Segmentation, Dynamics and Forecast by Geography, 2024-2030 |
18 | Market Segmentation, Dynamics and Forecast by Product Type, 2024-2030 |
19 | Market Segmentation, Dynamics and Forecast by Application, 2024-2030 |
20 | Market Segmentation, Dynamics and Forecast by End use, 2024-2030 |
21 | Product installation rate by OEM, 2023 |
22 | Incline/Decline in Average B-2-B selling price in past 5 years |
23 | Competition from substitute products |
24 | Gross margin and average profitability of suppliers |
25 | New product development in past 12 months |
26 | M&A in past 12 months |
27 | Growth strategy of leading players |
28 | Market share of vendors, 2023 |
29 | Company Profiles |
30 | Unmet needs and opportunity for new suppliers |
31 | Conclusion |
32 | Appendix |