The silicon-chip device called ATOMS - short for addressable transmitters operated as magnetic spins - could one day serve as miniature robotic wardens of our bodies, monitoring a patient's gastrointestinal tract, blood, or brain, researchers said.
The devices could measure factors that indicate the health of a patient - such as pH, temperature, pressure, sugar concentrations - and relay that information to doctors. The devices could even be instructed to release drugs.
The location of the device can be precisely identified within the body, something that proved challenging with existing devices, researchers said.
"Before now, one of the challenges was that it was hard to tell where they are in the body," said Emami.
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The new devices borrow from the principles of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in which the location of atoms in a patient's body is determined using magnetic fields.
The microdevices would also be located in the body using magnetic fields - but rather than relying on the body's atoms, the chips contain a set of integrated sensors, resonators, and wireless transmission technology that would allow them to mimic the magnetic resonance properties of atoms.
Researchers compare their device to the 1966 sci-fi movie Fantastic Voyage, in which a submarine and its crew are shrunk to microscopic size and injected into the bloodstream of a patient to heal him from the inside.