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Biotech Science

A Panoramic View of Your Insides 74

deepcleanfun writes "Researchers from New Mexico and Taiwan have invented a tiny probe — about the size of a rice grain — equipped with an ultrasound scanner that can travel through veins and arteries, taking ultrasound images of its surroundings. Unlike previous probes that travel through the body, which provide a view from only one direction at a time, the new device has seven imagers integrated onto the hexagonal prism that can see nearly everywhere at once."
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A Panoramic View of Your Insides

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  • by Fred_A ( 10934 ) <fred@f r e d s h o m e . o rg> on Thursday November 08, 2007 @12:53PM (#21282613) Homepage
    Apparently they haven't even gotten around to testing it on animals yet. But they say it works great in a glass of water. The news might be a bit premature.
    No nice pics either.
    • No nice pics either.
      Probably because we all know what the inside of a glass of water looks like...
      • by SQLGuru ( 980662 )
        But not from....the INSIDE!

        Layne
        • Re: (Score:1, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward
          I guess you've never been to a pool/river/lake have you? You probably only leave the basement to go to class.
          • by SQLGuru ( 980662 )
            Oh sure, I've been to those....but I've never seen through the walls to the outside.....if they dropped one of these in a glass, I'd like to see the distorted view of the surroundings......and how that might look....basically it would like being in a fish tank.

            Layne
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @12:54PM (#21282617) Journal
    Origami is the art of making figures by folding paper. They seem to have fabricated the sonar emitters in a flat piece and folded it into a hexagon. That seems to be the key to get multiple views.
  • by jav1231 ( 539129 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @12:56PM (#21282659)
    Without pics you weren't IN my insides!
  • by RandoX ( 828285 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @01:02PM (#21282743)
    Isn't having solid stuff in your bloodstream bad?
  • Sounds like (Score:2, Redundant)

    by slapout ( 93640 )
    it could be a Fantastic Voyage.
  • So doctors will now be able to see in 3D that the arterial blockage that killed the patient is the little probe they sent in to find a suspected arterial blockage?

    Cool tech and all, but how do they control where it goes?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by wattrlz ( 1162603 )
      There's a highly paid professional standing by the bedside manipulating the catheter by hand eg: twisting, pushing, and tugging a little tube to which the device is attached.
  • by butterwise ( 862336 ) <butterwise AT gmail> on Thursday November 08, 2007 @01:06PM (#21282815)
    ...has generously offered to pilot the device.
  • Privacy concerns? (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Couldn't this be used to track people? Is this project corporately funded? Follow the money.
  • by gEvil (beta) ( 945888 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @01:10PM (#21282863)
    Some people make tiny rice-sized probes to look at someone's insides while others simply go the Goatse route...
  • Without having read TFA (hey, this is slashdot) I assume this is for passing through a person's digestive system and not their bloodstream because getting a something the size of a piece of rice caught in the right place is like having a stroke, a heart attack, or other unhappy circulatory problems; and since I doubt it carries enough power to navigate it'd be pretty tough to keep it out of vital organs.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Jaidan ( 1077513 )
      It will be attached to the end of a "wire like endoscope" So no it's navigation won't be so much of a problem...They go so far as to say they will by able to pass it up into blood vessels in the brain to measure blood flow. Kinda weird, I would be bothered by the idea of a wire in my brain.
      • by MentlFlos ( 7345 )

        I would be bothered by the idea of a wire in my brain.
        You won't be bothered for very long if it breaks.
  • I interviewed with a doctor at Northwestern University Hospital in 1989 or so for an ultrasonic catheter to look at plaques/heart valves and such. There was come California based company who had the hardware, but not mush software, hence my interview.
  • Colonoscopies (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    For those of you of colonoscopy age... I asked my doctor if he could do my last two colonoscopies using only the pain-killer fentanyl, and omitting Versed (midolazam). The latter is a sedative and muscle-relaxant, but it induces drowsiness and often produces retrograde amnesia, i.e. you are conscious and awake but afterwards don't remember what happened.

    I'm glad I did. I did not experience any serious pain; at two points, presumably when going around corners, I felt something like a bad gas pain lasting onl
  • by MrMunkey ( 1039894 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @01:23PM (#21283027) Homepage
    People... the only thing that is different about this than other instruments already in use today is that it can view in more than one direction simultaneously. How do you think an angiogram is performed? They stick the think in through the artery in your leg, and fish it up to the spot where the blockage is. Sure, it sounds scary, but it's done every day. I think this is a great improvement to help doctors.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      No, some liquid which shows up on X-ray is put into the artery through the catheter, the catheter does not have to be shifted up to the location of the blockage/. On the photograph one will see where it gets narrow, the black line produced by the contrast fluid gets thinner.
      • Angioplasty is where they stick things in your veins in order to sort them out.

        A colleague of mine had a heart problem with a thin wall between two of the chambers causing oxygenated and de-oxygenated blood to mix. These things aren't uncommon and many people live with it without problem. However this guy is a scuba diver, and these heart problems can be dangerous. His doctor said 'stop diving'.

        He called for a second opinion, and discovered that they can stick a cylindrical probe up your femoral art
  • What sort of rice is one millimeter across and one millimeter long? Something got lost when going from Imperial to Metric...
  • Is this not what an aneurysm is? I can see it now. We appear to be loosing signal; it has gone to far we can not stop the sensor. Patient colapses.
  • ...but I found some here: http://goatse.cz/ [goatse.cz]
  • ---begin sarcastic comment---

    Isn't there someone that holds the "Origami Hexagon Fold" Patent that is going to sue them?

    How about someone holding the "Using waves to view internal organs in a human body" Patent?

    Or maybe the "Etching of ultrasound emitting device on silicon wafers" patent?

    ---end sarcastic comment---

    Seriously,

    if this invention grows to be used in humans, it will really provide some serious insights on disease prevention and diagnosis. I just hope that the patent morons don't destroy another
  • The porn industry has been doing this kind of stuff for years.
  • Can it be.. (Score:3, Funny)

    by sw155kn1f3 ( 600118 ) on Thursday November 08, 2007 @04:41PM (#21285885)
    .. used on Uranus :)?
    Can't resist.
  • Go looking for all that gum I swallowed when I was a kid.
  • It's kind of an "inside scan sonar!"

    Thank you, thank you... I'm here all week... Be sure to try out the buffet!
  • isn't there a risk that this thing might block an artery? and paralyze or kill you?
    • isn't there a risk that this thing might block an artery? and paralyze or kill you?
      Most likely, yes. But you must sign a release form at the hospital absolving them of any wrong doing should something go wrong. They are putting your life and health at risk, but heaven forbid they should be responsible for anything.

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

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