
After years of investment and development, wireless devices contained in swallowable
capsules are now reaching the market.
Companies
such as SmartPill based in Buffalo, New York and Israel-based Given Imaging
(PillCam) market capsules the size of vitamin tablets.
These
pills contain sensors or tiny cameras that collect information as they travel
through the gastrointestinal tract before being excreted from the body a day or
two later.
These
new electronic inventions transmit information such as acidity, pressure and
temperature levels or images of the esophagus and intestine to your doctor's
computer for analysis.
Doctors
often use invasive methods such as catheters, endoscopic instruments or
radioisotopes for collecting information about the digestive tract. So device
companies have been developing easier, less intrusive ways, to gather
information.
Digestive
diseases and disorders can include symptoms such as acid reflux, bloating,
heartburn, abdominal pain, constipation, difficulty swallowing or loss of
appetite.
"One of the main challenges is
determining just what is happening in the stomach and intestines." says
Dr. Anish A. Sheth, Director of the Gastrointestinal Motility Program at
Yale-New Haven Hospital.
Doctors
can inspect the colon and peer into the stomach using endoscopic instruments.
But some areas cannot be easily viewed, and finding out how muscles are working
can be difficult.
Electronic
pills are being used to measure muscle contraction, ease of passage and other
factors to reveal information unavailable in the past.
Sources:
givenimaging.com smartpillcorp.com
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