A robotic endoscope can swim through the digestive system, controlled by a joystick, allowing scientists to image areas of interest in the digestive tract and hone in on disease.
Credit: AFP/JIJI Press, Str
TOKYO: Japanese researchers have developed a self-propelled remote controlled capsule endoscope that can "swim" through the digestive tract.
As a first step toward its clinical application, they have succeeded in capturing images inside a person's stomach and colon using the tadpole-shaped capsule, the scientists said.
It is the first time a self-propelled endoscope has successfully moved from one part of the digestive tract to another and shot images inside the colon, the team said.
The device, nicknamed the ‘Mermaid’, is about one centimetre in diameter and 4.5cm long, and has magnetic driving gear that allows for precise control of its direction and location.
Joystick control
Doctors use a joystick to control the capsule's movements, watching them on a monitor screen. It can be swallowed for examination of the stomach or inserted rectally for the colon.
The research was announced at an international conference on digestive diseases in Chicago, Illinois, in May, and included scientists from Ryukoku University and Osaka Medical College on the southern island of Honshu, Japan.
Capsule endoscopes have been developed since the 1980s and came to be widely used in the 2000s. But they were unable to propel themselves, relying instead on muscle contractions to move them along.
The self-propelled capsule was first tested inside a dog's stomach in 2009 and it has been since modified and made smaller, the team said.
Precision images
The Mermaid was demonstrated before Japanese media at Osaka Medical College in Osaka's suburbs on earlier this week.
"By remotely controlling the capsule, we can precisely photograph the area which needs to be tested," said Osaka Medical College gastroenterology researcher Kazuhide Higuchi.
"It can examine the digestive canal from the oesophagus to the colon in a few hours. It reduces burdens on patients and can led to the discovery of cancer," he said.
