Sun.Star Pampanga

Gut check: Swallowed capsule could spot trouble, send alert

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Scientists have developed a swallowed capsule packed with tiny electronic­s and millions of geneticall­y engineered living cells that might someday be used to spot health problems from inside the gut.

The capsule was tested in pigs and correctly detected signs of bleeding, researcher­s at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology reported Thursday in the journal Science . At more than an inch long, it will have to be made smaller for testing in people. But the results suggest the capsule could eventually be used in people to find signs of ulcers, inflammato­ry bowel disease or even colon cancer, the researcher­s said.

It’s the latest advance in a growing field of sensors that can be swallowed or worn to monitor our health. Pills equipped with cameras, thermomete­rs and acidity gauges already look for disease and track digestion. Last year, a psychiatri­c medication that alerts doctors when it’s taken won U.S. approval. Stick-on skin monitors for recovering stroke patients are in the works.

The MIT device is the first to use engineered cells as sensors in swallowed capsules, said Kourosh Kalantar-zadeh, who is developing a gas-sensing, all-electronic pill at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia.

“The work is yet another step toward showing the great promises of smart, ingestible capsules,” said Kalantar-zadeh.

The researcher­s tested the capsules using a harmless strain of E. coli bacteria. The cells were modified with DNA from other bacteria to make them detect

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