News

A joint US-Chinese research team has developed a new technique that uses bubble-popping as a potential propulsion system for microbots. The discovery could potentially lead to the replacement of ...
Robotic pill could improve drug delivery It’s designed to be able to burrow into mucus layers in the small intestine, deliver its payload and then get passed after half an hour.
Chinese and US scientists team up to create a robot launching system which can penetrate skin and could replace needle-based drug injections.
Obvius Robotics announced that it successfully completed the first cases with its Certa handheld robotic platform in the U.S.
Investigators from Brigham and Women's Hospital--a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system--and MIT have developed RoboCap, an orally ingestible robotic drug delivery device ...
Researchers at the TechMed Centre of the University of Twente have transformed agile, fast-swimming sperm into tiny, ...
The orally ingestible drug delivery device has a robotic cap that spins and tunnels through the mucus barrier when it reaches the small intestine, allowing drugs carried by the capsule to pass ...
The new design could one day provide continuous, consistent drug dispersal without succumbing to fibrosis complications.
The pandemic was a catalyst for growing popular interest in robotics, and for shining a spotlight on the skilled labour shortages.
The future of robotic drug delivery This controlled, leak-resistant drug delivery could enable doctors to administer treatments more precisely and reduce the need for invasive procedures.
The pharmaceutical industry may be on the brink of a transformation, with innovative “robot pills” offering a potential solution for drug delivery, which could also prove lucrative for ...