September 13, 2017
Original link: http://www.kurzweilai.net/miniature-mri-simulator-chip-could-help-diagnose-and-treat-diseases-in-the-body-at-sub-millimeter-precision
Illustration
of an ATOMS microchip localized within the gastrointestinal tract (not
to scale; a prototype measures just 0.7 cubic millimeters). The
microchip contains a magnetic field sensor, integrated antennas, a
wireless powering device, and a circuit that adjusts its radio frequency
signal based on the magnetic field strength and wirelessly relays the
chip’s precise location. (credit: Ella Marushchenko/Caltech)
Caltech researchers have developed a “Fantastic Voyage” style prototype microchip that could one day be used in “smart pills” to diagnose and treat diseases when inserted into the human body.
Called ATOMS (addressable transmitters operated as magnetic spins), the microchips could one day monitor a patient’s gastrointestinal tract, blood, or brain, measuring factors that indicate a patient’s health — such as pH, temperature, pressure, and sugar concentrations — with sub-millimeter localization and relay that information to doctors. Or the devices could even be instructed to release drugs at precise locations.
An open access paper describing the new device appears in the September issue of the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering. The lead author is Manuel Monge, who now works at Elon Musk’s new Neuralink company.
The
ATOMS microchips, proven to work in tests with mice, mimic the way
nuclear spins in atoms in the body resonate to magnetic fields in a
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine and can be precisely identified
and localized within the body. Similarly, the ATOMS devices resonate at
different frequencies depending on where they are in a magnetic field.
(credit: Manuel Monge et al./ Nature Biomedical Engineering)