What's Your Gut Telling You?

Millions of people suffer from these painfully common conditions, and often endure inconvenient and invasive medical procedures to diagnose the causes.

In a study published in Nature Electronics, Khalil B. Ramadi, Assistant Professor of Bioengineering at NYU Tandon School of Engineering, revealed that he and a team of collaborators at MIT and Caltech have developed a tiny pill-like electromagnetic device that, once swallowed, could provide medical professionals a diagnostic window into the inner workings of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract.

The bluetooth-enabled device delivers a continual stream of data to a smartphone as it passes through the subject, using electromagnetic technology similar to what makes Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) machines work.

This breakthrough means that the more than one-third of the global population with irritable bowel syndrome and other disorders related to motility - the functioning of muscles and nerves in the GI tract - could avoid standard diagnostic procedures like computerized tomography (CT) scans, X-rays or endoscopic tubes inserted through the nose or other entry point. Those procedures can be physically and mentally uncomfortable, rely on potentially harmful radiation, and demand patients spend considerable time inside medical facilities.

Instead, the ingestible radiation-free microdevice would require only that people keep close to electromagnetic coils as the device makes its way through their bodies. The coils could be worn in a backpack or jacket, so patients could go about their normal lives during the process.

"We anticipate that our ingestible microdevice may keep people out of hospitals and reduce burdens on the healthcare system, while delivering information vital to diagnose motility disorders as accurately as possible," said Ramadi, who heads the Laboratory for Advanced Neuroengineering and Translational Medicine at NYU Abu Dhabi.

Ramadi and his colleagues spent three years developing the device, which required creating a system of electromagnets that could function with high-resolution throughout the one-to-two foot range of the human abdomen, and not degrade in the GI tract. In the Nature Electronics paper, they announced their successful trial on pigs, suggesting the likelihood of similar results in human trials necessary for the device’s eventual real-world availability.

"Motility disorders and diseases involve the GI tract moving at abnormal speeds, including by working too quickly or slowly in specific places, but those things can be frustratingly difficult to measure," said Ramadi. "Current ingestible trackers tell us conditions like temperature inside the body, or capture images, but don’t directly indicate their location. Once our highly-sensitive device is swallowed it also shows us exactly where it is at any time. That gives us a timeline of the tract's movement and exposes the precise place of the malfunction, information critical to identifying the underlying disease."

This new study adds to Ramadi's track record in pioneering novel ingestibles that can diagnose and treat medical conditions. Previously, he announced that his team created an ingestible device that uses electrical signals to modulate brain activity via the gut, a development that could lead to treating a range of diseases, from Alzheimer's to diabetes, without medications - and their attendant side effects - or surgery.

Ramadi's work also exemplifies Tandon's commitment to groundbreaking research that improves healthcare, one of the School's areas of excellence. Among many other contributions to the field, Tandon researchers have recently created smartwatch-like devices that can help wearers manage their mental states; retina scanning that can predict stroke reoccurance; technology to help track the development of breast cancer; and models to assess the accuracy of mortality predictions when applied to different geographies.

Sharma, S., Ramadi, K.B., Poole, N.H. et al.
Location-aware ingestible microdevices for wireless monitoring of gastrointestinal dynamics.
Nat Electron. 2023. doi: 10.1038/s41928-023-00916-0

Most Popular Now

SPARK TSL Acquires Sentean Group

SPARK TSL is acquiring Sentean Group, a Dutch company with a complementary background in hospital entertainment and communication, and bringing its Fusion Bedside platform for clinical and patient apps to...

GPT-4 Matches Radiologists in Detecting …

Large language model GPT-4 matched the performance of radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports, according to research published in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America...

ChatGPT Extracts Data for Ischaemic Stro…

In an ischaemic stroke, an artery in the brain is blocked by blood clots and the brain cells can no longer be supplied with blood as a result. Doctors must...

Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health …

Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust has successfully implemented Alcidion's Miya Precision platform to streamline bed management workflow across seven community hospitals in Worcestershire. The trust delivers community...

A Shortcut for Drug Discovery

For most human proteins, there are no small molecules known to bind them chemically (so called "ligands"). Ligands frequently represent important starting points for drug development but this knowledge gap...

New Horizon Europe Funding Boosts Europe…

The European Commission has announced the launch of new Horizon Europe calls, with a substantial funding pool of over €112 million. These calls are aimed primarily at pioneering projects in...

Cleveland Clinic Study Finds AI can Deve…

Cleveland Clinic researchers developed an artficial intelligence (AI) model that can determine the best combination and timeline to use when prescribing drugs to treat a bacterial infection, based solely on...

New AI-Technology Estimates Brain Age Us…

As people age, their brains do, too. But if a brain ages prematurely, there is potential for age-related diseases such as mild-cognitive impairment, dementia, or Parkinson's disease. If "brain age...

Radboud University Medical Center and Ph…

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, and Radboud University Medical Center have signed a hospital-wide, long-term strategic partnership that delivers the latest patient monitoring...

With Huge Patient Dataset, AI Accurately…

Scientists have designed a new artificial intelligence (AI) model that emulates randomized clinical trials at determining the treatment options most effective at preventing stroke in people with heart disease. The model...

GPT-4, Google Gemini Fall Short in Breas…

Use of publicly available large language models (LLMs) resulted in changes in breast imaging reports classification that could have a negative effect on patient management, according to a new international...

ChatGPT fails at heart risk assessment

Despite ChatGPT's reported ability to pass medical exams, new research indicates it would be unwise to rely on it for some health assessments, such as whether a patient with chest...