Jun 15, 2022(Nanowerk News) If youve ever swallowed the same round tablet in hopes of curing everything from stomach cramps to headaches, you already know that medicines arent always designed to treat precise pain points.While over-the-counter pills have cured many ailments for decades, biomedical researchers have only recently begun exploring ways to improve targeted drug delivery when treating more complicated medical conditions, like cardiovascular disease or cancer.A promising innovation within this burgeoning area of biomedicine is the millirobot. These fingertip-sized robots are poised to become medicines future lifesavers to crawl, spin, and swim to enter narrow spaces on their mission to investigate inner workings or dispense medicines.Origami millirobot with spinning-enabled propulsion. (Image: Zhao Lab)Leading research in this field, Stanford University mechanical engineer Renee Zhaois working on many millirobot designs at once including a magnetic crawling robot, which was recently seen worming its way through a stomach on the cover of Science Advances. Powered by magnetic fields which allow for continuous motion and can be instantly applied to generate torque and change the way the robots move her robots can self-select different locomotive states and overcome obstacles in the body. Just by shifting the strength and orientation of the magnetic field, Zhaos team can send the robot sailing across the body at distances in a single leap that are 10 times the robots length.A key aspect of her research, the magnetic actuation also provides untethered control for non-invasive operation and separates the control unit from the device to allow for miniaturization. Zhao said their most recent robot, featured in Nature Communications ("Spinning-enabled wireless amphibious origami millirobot"), is the most robust and multifunctional untethered robot we have ever developed.This new spinning-enabled wireless amphibious origami millirobot is as multifunctional as its name implies. Its an elegantly conceived single unit thats able to speedily travel over an organs slick, uneven surfaces and swim through body fluids, propelling itself wirelessly while transporting liquid medicines. Unlike pills swallowed or liquids injected, this robot withholds medicine until it reaches the target, and then releases a high-concentration drug, said Zhao, who is an assistant professor of mechanical engineering. That is how our robot achieves targeted drug delivery.Reshaping drug deliveryWhats groundbreaking about this particular amphibious robot, according to Zhao, is that it goes beyond the designs of most origami-based robots, which only utilize origamis foldability to control how a robot morphs and moves.On top of looking at how folding could enable the robot to perform certain actions imagine an accordion fold that squeezes out medicine Zhaos team also considered how the dimensions of each folds exact shape influenced the robots rigid motion when it was not folded. As a result, the robots unfolded form inherently lends itself to propulsion through the environment. Such broad-minded considerations allowed the researchers to get more use out of the materials without adding bulk and in Zhaos world, the more functionality achieved from a single structure within the robots design, the less invasive the medical procedure is.Another unique aspect of the design of the robot is the combination of certain geometrical features. A longitudinal hole into the robots center and lateral slits angled up the sides reduced water resistance and helped the robot swim better. This design induces a negative pressure in the robot for fast swimming and meanwhile provides suction for cargo pickup and transportation, Zhao said. We take full advantage of the geometric features of this small robot and explore that single structure for different applications and for different functions.Based on conversations with Stanford Department of Medicine experts, the Zhao Lab is considering how to improve upon current treatments and procedures by building new technologies. If this work goes Zhaos way, her robots wont just provide a handy way to effectively dispense medicine but could also be used to carry instruments or cameras into the body, changing how doctors examine patients. The team is also working on using ultrasound imaging to track where robots go, eliminating any need to cut open organs.The smaller, simpler, the betterWhile we wont see millirobots like Zhaos in real health care settings until more is known about optimal design and imaging best practices, the labs first-of-its-kind swimmer highlighted in Nature Communications is among their robots that are furthest along. Its currently in the trial stages that come before any live animal testing that proceeds human clinical trials.In the meantime, Zhaos team continues combining a variety of novel smart materials and structures into unique designs that ultimately form new biomedical devices. She also plans to continue scaling down her robots to further biomedical research at the microscale.As an engineer, Zhao strives to develop the simplest structures with the most functionality. Her amphibious robot exemplifies that mission, as it inspired her team to more fully consider geometric features not yet commonly prioritized by other origami robot researchers. We started looking at how all these work in parallel, Zhao said. This is a very unique point of this work, and it also has broad potential application in the biomedical field.
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Origami millirobots bring health care closer to precision drug delivery - Nanowerk
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