Team Develops Wireless, Dissolvable Sensors to Monitor Brain

Tiny implants measure intracranial pressure, temperature before being absorbed into the body

Written byWashington University School of Medicine
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A team of neurosurgeons and engineers has developed wireless brain sensors that monitor intracranial pressure and temperature and then are absorbed by the body, negating the need for surgery to remove the devices.

Such implants, developed by scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and engineers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, potentially could be used to monitor patients with traumatic brain injuries, but the researchers believe they can build similar absorbable sensors to monitor activity in organ systems throughout the body. Their findings are published online Jan. 18 in the journal Nature.

Related article: Brain Monitoring Takes a Leap Out of the Lab

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