Tiny Robot Backflips through the Colon
A tiny rectangular robot developed at Purdue University can travel throughout a colon to deliver drugs by doing back flips. The low-cost, magnetic microrobots are made of polymer and metal and are nontoxic and biocompatible. The robot could get a drug directly to its target site, without side effects like hair loss or stomach bleeding, that the drug may otherwise cause by interacting with other organs along the way. The researchers chose the colon for in vivo experiments because it has an easy point of entry and rough conditions that would prove its resilience. Since it is only the size of a few human hairs and too small to carry a battery, the microrobot is powered and wirelessly controlled from the outside by a magnetic field. “When we apply a rotating external magnetic field to these robots, they rotate just like a car tire would to go over rough terrain,” says researcher David Cappelleri.
Transcript
00:00:00 We've been working on these microscale tumbling microrobots. So these are small little magnetic bodies, which we can control using external magnetic fields. Just like you have a car tire to go over different rough terrain, we can use that same kind of modality to have these robots go over rough terrain, dry surfaces, in wet surfaces, up and down inclines. Our next step is, what kind of real applications or biomedical applications can we do with these robots. --There's lots of potential applications for the technology that Dave's lab has really been pioneering. We picked something that we thought would be easiest as a first demonstration to start with, which is imaging the colon, and thinking about GI issues. Because they're small, it fit well inside even a mouse's colon. And then we were able to see what reaction (and really there wasn't much at all) the tissue had in
00:00:48 relation to these microrobots as they were moving back and forth. --This is the first demonstration of a microscale tumbling robot in vivo. We were able to show that we can locomote, and we're able to actually get the robots to move up and down the colon very easily. So we're pretty excited to show that we do have mobility in vivo with these magnetic microrobots. --The fact that we could get the robot introduced, manipulate back and forth, localized to a specific location, and then it would actually pass out naturally, without any harm to the animal, I think was a really great first demonstration of the biomedical applications. Once we move up to large animals or humans, I think you're going to be doing something deeper into tissue, with maybe not just one, but a dozen of these robots, and would be watching these flip through a much larger colon. Then you can think about multiple payloads, and even targeting multiple sites. --There's nothing
00:01:37 here that I think we could individually do, but together, we can really do something great.