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Journey to the centre of the body

01:00 Sat 23rd Dec 2000 |

By Lisa Cardy

REMEMBER the sci-fi film Fantastic Voyage �It may not be�so fantastic, as scientists�develop 'mini robots' to�travel�through the body's bloodstream, attacking�tumours�and scouring blocked arteries.

Nanotechnologists in Europe and America are confident that within a year they'll have built prototypes of�microscopic 'submarines' and 'helicopters'�to perform the tasks.

In the US, a Utah State University team�is developing a tiny sub to be�carried around the body by bacteria.

The team says that normally potentially deadly microrganisms, such as Salmonella and E. coli, could make perfect 'motors'. The microsubs will hitch a ride on the injected bacteria as it swims through the bloodstream to its target.

Another American team, at Cornell University,�is developing biomotors,�tiny machines�that harness power from the body. A chemical called ATP, the body's natural fuel, turns the metal rotors of the microscopic machines�to send�them on�their way.

In Duisburg, Germany, researchers from a company called MicroTEC are also developing a mini submarine, powered around the body by an external magnetic field.

Over the last five years, huge leaps have been made in the field of nanotechnology, which measures devices in nanometres, a millionth of a millimetre.

The micro machines have yet to be tested within the living body, and it could�be many years before�they are routinely used.

Would you let surgeons inject�a 'mini submarines'�into your body if it became a standard medical procedure �Is this science gone too far Tell The AnswerBank what you think. Click here to join the discussion.

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