Categories: Uncategorized

NASA’s Biocapsule Medicates From The Inside

Image credit: Gizmodo

NASA has recently created an implant technology that could change the future of medicine forever in the form of a tiny capsule implant. Biocapsules are made of carbon nanotubes that can automatically administer medication when triggered by certain stresses of the body. The implant is about a quarter inch in length and is placed under the skin through a small incision. They’re strong enough to stay under the skin for up to three years without needing maintenance or replacement, and a patient could host a variety of biocapsules as needed to deal with a whole range of stresses. NASA’s newest medical breakthrough isn’t just for space. While NASA created biocapsules primarily to fight heightened levels of radiation during space travel, the new medical technology has an incredible number of uses on Earth. The capsule’s creator, Dr. David Loftus, spoke about its many medical applications in an interview with Gizmodo. One of its most promising medical uses could be to treat patients with diabetes, administering insulin automatically according to fluctuating levels of blood sugar. This would effectively circumvent the most common reason for death in diabetic patients, who cannot monitor glucose levels during the night. The biocapsule treatment could additionally be used as more efficient way of administering chemotherapy medicine to cancer patients. The capsule could be implanted directly into tumorous tissue, concentrating the dosage much more intensely and avoid the harmful side-effects that the treatment has on the rest of the body. Loftus explained that the new technology would also be useful in treating children with missing or defective genes, where the biocapsule could progressively administer proteins missing from the body in lieu of periodic injections. height=350 Animal trials for the biocapsule are scheduled for this year, with human trails to follow sometime in the future. If everything goes according to plan, the capsule’s creator estimates that we’ll see common use of NASA’s biocapsule within the next ten to fifteen years. With so many possibilities and applications, it’s almost difficult to imagine how profoundly biocapsule technology could change lives all over the world (and even outside of it).
Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Share
Published by
Techli

Recent Posts

NovaWave Capital brings new LPs on board and launches AI venture studio

NovaWave Capital, the Silicon Valley-based VC fund, announced this week that it's expanding its AI…

7 días ago

Automotus picks up $9M to bring AI order to congested curbs

Automotus, a Los Angeles startup focused on using software to untangle curbside congestion, has raised…

2 semanas ago

7 Tech Innovations to Watch in 2026

As we move deeper into the digital age, 2026 is shaping up to be a…

2 semanas ago

AI is professionalizing how enterprises communicate

For startups, mastering communication is no longer just about persuasion—it’s about scalability. As companies grow,…

4 semanas ago

India’s rise in a fragmented world sets the stage for the Horasis India Meeting in Singapore

In an increasingly fragmented world economy, global alignment has become both an opportunity and a…

1 mes ago

On route to Las Vegas: AI-supported resilience coach from Deep Care named Digital Health honoree at CES Innovation Awards 2026

The world-renowned CES Innovation Awards® program is an annual competition honoring outstanding design and engineering…

1 mes ago