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Ethical and legal issues of ingestible electronic sensors

Nature Electronics, 2019
Ingestible electronic sensors are a promising technology for improving health outcomes that may, for example, be useful in monitoring and promoting the taking of medication. However, these sensors also raise ethical and legal challenges that need to be considered by all stakeholders—notably, the creators of such products—at the earliest stages of the ...
Sara Gerke   +3 more
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Ingestible pH Sensing Capsule with Thread-Based Electrochemical Sensors

2022 IEEE Sensors, 2022
Existing techniques for diagnosing gastrointestinal disorders in stomach, small and large intestines, and colon depend on biopsy, endoscopy or colonoscopy methods which are invasive, expensive and time-consuming. In fact, such methods also lack the ability to access large parts of the small intestine.
Cihan, Asci   +3 more
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Ingestible Sensors as Design Material for Bodily Play

Extended Abstracts of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2020
Ingestible sensors are pill-like digital sensors performing sensing functions inside the human body. Such technology is becoming increasingly common in clinical uses. However, we believe there exists an opportunity to also investigate ingestible sensors as design material for bodily play to facilitate intriguing bodily experiences.
Zhuying Li   +3 more
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Sensor System Maturation for Gas Turbine Engine Particulate Ingestion Monitoring

Volume 4: Controls, Diagnostics, and Instrumentation, 2023
Abstract Experimental studies of turbine engine sand, dust, and ash ingestion have shown that certain constituents, typically such as Calcium, Magnesium, Aluminum, and Silicon (CMAS) compound minerals and/or Chlorides and Sulfates, are particularly detrimental to engine turbine components. These reactive media undergo a phase change from
George Papadopoulos   +2 more
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Review of Communication Systems for Ingestible Miniaturized Integrated Sensor Microsystems

2009 Advanced Technologies for Enhanced Quality of Life, 2009
Recently, there is a growing interest for miniaturized telemetry systems for a variety of biomedical applications such as the development of wireless sensor systems that can be integrated into a noninvasive capsule format to perform endoscopic functions within the gastrointestinal tract.
Aydin, Nizamettin, Arslan, T.
openaire   +2 more sources

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