Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects

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Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects


Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects
Many parents get scared by a child swallowing something strange like a metal coin, a nail, a magnet, or a battery, but that's very easy.

A team of scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has succeeded in developing a new robot made from the intestines of the pig that can capture and remove foreign objects that settle in the body.

The new robot can also repair and treat internal wounds and deliver the drug to its target location, according to the new Daily Mail.

The scientists said they chose the name of their new experiment, the "origami robot" because the instrument used in the form of accordion can be folded and frozen in an ice capsule, and when it reaches the stomach melts and reveals the robot.

Daniela Ross, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and the Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence, said one of the most important tasks of robots is to save the lives of children who ingest batteries used to operate electronic devices, as they can burn quickly through the lining of the stomach and become fatal.

Professor Ross added that medical companies have expressed their desire to apply clinical trials, which require a regulatory process to conduct animal and human studies.Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects
Many parents get scared by a child swallowing something strange like a metal coin, a nail, a magnet, or a battery, but that's very easy.

A team of scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has succeeded in developing a new robot made from the intestines of the pig that can capture and remove foreign objects that settle in the body.

The new robot can also repair and treat internal wounds and deliver the drug to its target location, according to the new Daily Mail.

The scientists said they chose the name of their new experiment, the "origami robot" because the instrument used in the form of accordion can be folded and frozen in an ice capsule, and when it reaches the stomach melts and reveals the robot.

Daniela Ross, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and the Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence, said one of the most important tasks of robots is to save the lives of children who ingest batteries used to operate electronic devices, as they can burn quickly through the lining of the stomach and become fatal.

Professor Ross added that medical companies have expressed their desire to apply clinical trials, which require a regulatory process to conduct animal and human studies.Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects
Many parents get scared by a child swallowing something strange like a metal coin, a nail, a magnet, or a battery, but that's very easy.

A team of scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has succeeded in developing a new robot made from the intestines of the pig that can capture and remove foreign objects that settle in the body.

The new robot can also repair and treat internal wounds and deliver the drug to its target location, according to the new Daily Mail.

The scientists said they chose the name of their new experiment, the "origami robot" because the instrument used in the form of accordion can be folded and frozen in an ice capsule, and when it reaches the stomach melts and reveals the robot.

Daniela Ross, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and the Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence, said one of the most important tasks of robots is to save the lives of children who ingest batteries used to operate electronic devices, as they can burn quickly through the lining of the stomach and become fatal.

Professor Ross added that medical companies have expressed their desire to apply clinical trials, which require a regulatory process to conduct animal and human studies.Scientists create a small robot that treats internal wounds and removes foreign objects
Many parents get scared by a child swallowing something strange like a metal coin, a nail, a magnet, or a battery, but that's very easy.

A team of scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has succeeded in developing a new robot made from the intestines of the pig that can capture and remove foreign objects that settle in the body.

The new robot can also repair and treat internal wounds and deliver the drug to its target location, according to the new Daily Mail.

The scientists said they chose the name of their new experiment, the "origami robot" because the instrument used in the form of accordion can be folded and frozen in an ice capsule, and when it reaches the stomach melts and reveals the robot.

Daniela Ross, director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Computer Science and the Laboratory of Artificial Intelligence, said one of the most important tasks of robots is to save the lives of children who ingest batteries used to operate electronic devices, as they can burn quickly through the lining of the stomach and become fatal.

Professor Ross added that medical companies have expressed their desire to apply clinical trials, which require a regulatory process to conduct animal and human studies.
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