a mere four millimeters across and is 500 microns thick.
The sensor requires no wires, batteries, or telemetry within the body. The idea is that it would be attached to a conventional orthopedic implant, which would then be installed as it normally would be, within the body. After that point, the sensor could monitor and wirelessly transmit data regarding load, strain, motion, temperature, and pressure, from the site of the implant.
This data could allow doctors to determine when it was safe for the patient to return to work, and could also alert them to problems with the implant.
The Rensselaer team is currently producing the sensors by hand, but are looking towards mass-production, which should bring their cost down. It will be interesting to see if the technology compliments or competes with the Ortho-Tag system, in which a hand-held probe is used to read data transmitted by a radio-frequency chip, which is attached to an orthopedic implant.
Source: Orthopaedic Research Society
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