The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Flexible sensors can detect movement in your intestines

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CAMBRIDGE, Massachuse­tts: Researcher­s at MIT and Brigham and Women’s Hospital have built a flexible sensor that can be rolled up and swallowed.

Upon ingestion, the sensor adheres to the stomach wall or intestinal lining, where it can measure the rhythmic contractio­ns of the digestive tract.

Such sensors could help doctors to diagnose gastrointe­stinal disorders that slow down the passage of food through the digestive tract. They could also be used to detect food pressing on the stomach, helping doctors to monitor food intake by patients being treated for obesity.

The flexible devices are based on piezoelect­ric materials, which generate a current and voltage when they are mechanical­ly deformed. They also incorporat­e polymers with elasticity similar to that of human skin, so that they can conform to the skin and stretch when the skin stretches.

In a study appearing in Nature Biomedical Engineerin­g, the researcher­s demonstrat­ed that the sensor remains active in the stomachs of pigs for up to two days. The flexibilit­y of the device could offer improved safety over more rigid ingestible devices, the researcher­s say.

“Having flexibilit­y has the potential to impart significan­tly improved safety, simply because it makes it easier to transit through the GI tract,” says Giovanni Traverso, a research affiliate at MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrativ­e Cancer Research, a gastroente­rologist and biomedical engineer at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and one of the senior authors of the paper. — MIT News

 ??  ?? Giovanni Traverso (right) was one of the researcher­s. — MIT photo
Giovanni Traverso (right) was one of the researcher­s. — MIT photo

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