Open Source & Distribution

Philosophy

This project is explicitly not a medical device. It is a food analysis toolkit — measuring compounds in food, not in people. The framing matters both legally and scientifically.

Core goals:

  1. Replace diet lore with actual measurements
  2. Make food compound testing accessible to people who can’t afford lab testing
  3. Build a community dataset that improves on the inconsistent published food tables
  4. Democratize the science that currently only exists in academic papers

Open Source Strategy

Everything is published openly under a permissive license (CC-BY or similar):

  • Protocols (this vault, exported as PDF/web)
  • Arduino firmware (GitHub)
  • STL files for colorimeter enclosure and cuvette holder (Printables/Thingiverse)
  • Standard curve spreadsheet templates (Google Sheets)
  • Data logging template (this vault + Google Form)
  • Community data sheet (public Google Sheet or Airtable)

Why open source over selling:

  • No FDA IVD regulatory exposure
  • Maximum reach — anyone can build from the docs
  • Community can improve the protocols
  • Fits mutual aid / democratize knowledge values
  • A convenience kit can still be offered separately for cost recovery

Convenience Kit (Optional)

For people who don’t want to source chemicals themselves, offer a pre-measured kit as a community service (not for profit):

Kit contents:

  • Pre-weighed reagent packets (Trinder reagent components, RB4-Cu working reagent)
  • Calibration standard vials (sodium salicylate, sodium oxalate)
  • Plastic cuvettes (10)
  • Plastic sample tubes (10)
  • Coffee filters (10)
  • Protocol card (laminated)
  • QR code linking to full documentation

What the kit does NOT include:

  • HCl and NaOH — purchasable locally (hardware store), reduces shipping hazmat issues
  • Colorimeter hardware — open source build docs provided
  • Histamine enzyme strips — purchasable separately from BioAssay Systems

Labeling:

  • “Food compound analysis reagents”
  • “For measuring salicylates and oxalates in food samples”
  • “Not for medical diagnostic use”
  • Safety information for each reagent
  • Full protocol reference

Regulatory Positioning

The kit tests food, not the person. This is the same category as:

  • Wine sulfite test kits
  • Water quality test kits
  • Food freshness indicators
  • pH test strips for home brewing

None of these require FDA clearance. The key is consistent framing — never make health claims, always frame as food quality/composition testing.

Do:

  • “Measure oxalate content in your spinach”
  • “Compare histamine levels in fresh vs. stored meat”
  • “Test salicylate content in garden produce”

Don’t:

  • “Diagnose histamine intolerance”
  • “Test if food is safe for MCAS”
  • “Determine if you will react to this food”

Community Data

A public shared dataset is the long-term value of this project. Even 50 users measuring consistently generates more reliable data than most of the published tables the diet lists are based on.

Minimum viable dataset fields:

  • Food type
  • Source (homegrown/store)
  • Days since harvest/purchase
  • Storage method
  • Salicylate reading (mM)
  • Oxalate reading (µmol/L)
  • Total amine screen (ratio)
  • Histamine strip result (ppm, if run)
  • Protocol version used

Platform options (TBD):

  • Public Google Sheet (simplest)
  • Airtable (better filtering/views)
  • GitHub repo with CSV (most open)
  • Custom simple web form → database