Tiny bio-inspired swarm robots for targeted medical interventions

Tiny bio-inspired swarm robots for targeted medical interventions
Naturally occurring microswimmers such as spermatozoa and bacteria exploit the no-slip boundary conditions to execute upstream motion along the wall. Image 1: Credit: Ahmed et al.

Micro-sized robots could bring a new wave of innovation in the medical field by allowing doctors to access specific regions inside the human body without the need for highly invasive procedures. Among other things, these tiny robots could be used to carry drugs, genes or other substances to specific sites inside the body, opening up new possibilities for treating different medical conditions.

Researchers at ETH Zurich and Helmholtz Institute Erlangen–Nürnberg for Renewable Energy have recently developed micro and nano-sized robots inspired by biological micro-swimmers (e.g., bacteria or spermatozoa). These , presented in a paper published in Nature Machine Intelligence, are capable of upstream motility, which essentially means that they can autonomously move in the opposite direction to that in which a fluid (e.g., blood) flows. This makes them particularly promising for intervening inside the .

"We believe that the ideas discussed in our multidisciplinary study can transform many aspects of medicine by enabling tasks such as targeted and precise delivery of drugs or genes, as well as facilitating non-invasive surgeries," Daniel Ahmed, lead author of the recent paper, told TechXplore.

The bio-inspired and wireless micro/nanorobotic systems developed by Ahmed and his colleagues exploit the no-slip boundary conditions of a wall to move upstream, responding to externally triggered acoustic and magnetic fields. By swimming upstream against the , the robots could be used to deliver small drug molecules to sites inside the body that are particularly hard to reach.

Tiny bio-inspired swarm robots for targeted medical interventions
In a bioinspired system, superparamagnetic particles injected into the capillary self-assemble into a spinning microswarm due to the dipole–dipole interaction of a rotating magnetic field. The microswarm was shown to be marginalized towards the wall due to the presence of acoustic pressure nodes (marked as dashed black lines). Image 1: Credit: Ahmed et al.

"External-field-induced robots are an attractive concept because they do not require an onboard power supply or intricate moving parts, which means that they can be scaled down to nanometer-sized resolution" Ahmed said. "In addition, both acoustic and magnetic fields are safe for humans, are non-invasive, can penetrate deeply into the human body, and are well-developed in clinical settings."

By combining acoustic and magnetic fields, the devised by the researchers could help to overcome some of the issues observed in other artificial micro-swimmers that are based on single actuation techniques. Moreover, as they respond to fields applied outside the body, the micro/nano robots do not require an on-board power supply or highly sophisticated and expensive components.

"Typically, injected tiny agents will follow the vasculature's bloodstream with little to no control in the circulatory system," Ahmed explained. "Recent findings, however, have shown that many naturally-occurring microswimmers such as bacteria and spermatozoa exhibit propulsion against the flow by exploiting the nonslip boundary conditions of the wall. Upstream motion becomes possible because the velocity at the wall is minimum."

Tiny bio-inspired swarm robots for targeted medical interventions
Image sequences demonstrate the rheotaxis of a microswarm rolling along the wall of the capillary (tracked in blue) in a combined acoustic and magnetic field. The streamlines of the oppositely directed flow are shown by cyan, green and red trajectories. Image 1: Credit: Ahmed et al.

So far, the use of micro- or nano-sized robots in medicine has been limited, particularly within the vascular system (i.e., the vessels through which blood and lymph travel throughout the body). One reason for this is that robots operating in the vascular system should be easily controlled in a non-invasive way and should be able to move in the opposite direction to that in which the blood flows, two characteristics that have so far proved fairly difficult to achieve.

The new robotic system developed by Ahmed and his colleagues has both of these qualities, as it is capable of upstream motility and is controlled using externally applied acousto-magnetic fields. In the future, this recent study could thus open up new exciting possibilities for performing targeted surgeries or delivering substances to specific sites within the body through the vascular system.

"The blood flow velocity in small animal models, such as rat, mouse, and zebrafish, is in the range of a few mms−1," Ahmed said. "We now plan to incorporate our swarm microrobotic systems with appropriate imaging modality to visualize and navigate robots in vivo in small animals. The ability to propel against flows can provide exciting opportunities for application in targeted therapeutics in the tumor vasculature."

More information: Bioinspired acousto-magnetic microswarm robots with upstream motility. Nature Machine Intelligence(2021). DOI: 10.1038/s42256-020-00275-x.

Journal information: Nature Machine Intelligence

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Citation: Tiny bio-inspired swarm robots for targeted medical interventions (2021, January 25) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://techxplore.com/news/2021-01-tiny-bio-inspired-swarm-robots-medical.html
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