Snake Robots Will Soon Crawl Around Inside Your Body Off-Leash
Dan Nosowitz
at 06:08 AM 30 May 2020
Comments 0
Military Snakebot This snakebot is much larger than the ones that'll be swimming around your veins/organs. " width="525" height="679"/>
Military Snakebot This snakebot is much larger than the ones that'll be swimming around your veins/organs.
IMAGE BY Courtesy Special Operations Apps
Health // 

We've seen snake robots and, of course, tons of surgery robots, but Dr Michael Argenziano, the Chief of Adult Cardiac Surgery at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University Medical Center in New York, says we'll soon have fully untethered snake-type robots that will crawl through the human body, assisting with all kinds of fixes and maintenance.

There are lots of easily imaginable use cases - a snakebot for heart surgery would require only a small incision, rather than a wildly invasive slice for traditional surgery. One day, reports the AP, they may "be able to test chemicals or blood in the body, or even the electrical connections in nerves." Now we just have to get past the Indiana-Jones-ooginess of a tiny robosnake squirming its way through our bodies.

[AP]

RELATED
Video: Rescuing Disaster Victims With Snake Robots Deployed By Dogs
Dogs and robots are both known for their search and rescue abilities, but each has its own flaws. Robots can't sniff, and other than barking, dogs can't relay specific information ... more >
Next-Generation Surveillance Robots Can Analyse Their Environment
Manned surveillance missions are critical to obtaining useful intelligence. But sending a soldier into sensitive areas can often be too dangerous. Scientists are developing robots ... more >
3D Printed Spider Robot Designed To Rescue You
We hope none of our readers ever find themselves in an emergency situation. But if you do, don’t worry if a robotic spider comes crawling towards you - it’s there to he... more >
 
0 COMMENTS

Leave a comment

Please provide your details to leave a comment.

The fields marked with (*) are required.


Display Name: *
Email *:
Comments *:
(Max 750 characters)
Characters remaining:
*

(letters are not case-sensitive)

Enter the text in the image above
 
Editor's Picks
BY Ian Chant POSTED 02.06.2020 | 1 COMMENT
BY Ashley Wright POSTED 30.05.2020 | 0 COMMENTS