
A team of bioengineers from Boston Children’s Hospital have recently created a robot that can navigate independently inside the body. This robotic catheter was programmed to maneuver along the walls of an animal heart (swine) with no human guidance in a model of cardiac valve repair.
Published in the journal Science Robotics, this study was led by Pierre Dupont, PhD, chief of Pediatric Cardiac Bioengineering at Boston Children’s Hospital, and marks a significant milestone in integrating robotics into surgery. Surgeons have been operating robots through controllers in procedures for several years and magnetism has been shown to steer tiny robots through the body; however, Dupont states this is the first documented study in which a robot successfully self-navigated through the body.
This robotic catheter utilized an optical touch sensor to navigate within the body. This sensor, created in Dupont’s lab, made use of preoperative scans and a layout of the cardiac structure to successfully direct the robot. This sensor also utilizes AI and image-trained algorithms to properly navigate to where it needs to be in the heart.