Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. Wearables
  5. News

Futuristic hydrogel bandages use sensors to deliver medicine to all the right places

Add as a preferred source on Google

A team of MIT engineers have developed the smart bandage of the future, and it’s made of tech’s new favorite polymer: hydrogel. The flexible, soft material of the bandage can be enhanced with electronics and sensors to measure vital signs or administer medication,  and since hydrogel is naturally stretchy, the smart bandage is perfect for knees and elbows, where regular old Band-Aids just don’t do the trick.

Xuanhe Zhao and his MIT team have successfully embedded the hydrogel polymer with conductive wires, semiconductor chips, LED lights, and temperature sensors. The team’s most promising combination of tech capabilities allows the bandage to administer medication when the wearer’s body temperature changes. When the bandage’s sensors detect a significant change, tiny drug reservoirs and delivery pathways release medication directly to the person’s body. LED light panels embedded in the hydrogel can even be used to indicate when stores of drugs within the reservoirs are running low.

The hydrogel material itself is made of mostly water, combined with flexible biopolymers that keep the bandage flexible and soft. While maintaining this pliability, the hydrogel still forms a strong bond with surfaces as varied as human skin, titanium, silicon, glass and ceramic. The flexibility of the hydrogel enables the smart bandage to last longer, all while protecting the integrity of the bandage’s technological components. Electronic wires and heat sensors embedded in the bandage were able to withstand repeated stretching during lab testing.

Recommended Videos

Beyond the skin-level smart bandage, Zhao’s technology could also be used for internal medical applications. Implanted glucose sensors and neural probes are often rejected by the body as foreign objects, but this kind of internal monitoring would be easier than ever if electronic components were embedded in a hydrogel that mimics local human tissues. Embedding time-release medication reservoirs, heat sensors, and wires in smart implantable hydrogels would be a powerful tool for the field of medicine.

Chloe Olewitz
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Chloe is a writer from New York with a passion for technology, travel, and playing devil's advocate. You can find out more…
Research finds generative AI making frauds a cakewalk for bad actors
New research shows scams that once took hours now take minutes.
Concerned man with devices medium shot

Generative AI isn’t just changing how we work, but it’s also transforming how scams are pulled off. As per Vyntra’s 2026 report, tasks that once took fraudsters over 16 hours can now be done in under 5 minutes using generative AI tools.

That’s a massive shift. What used to require skill, time, and effort can now be automated and scaled almost instantly, turning fraud into what experts are calling a $400 billion global industry.

Read more
Study says AI chatbots are increasingly ignoring humans, but it isn’t quite Skynet yet
Artificial Intelligence

Isn’t it frustrating when you ask an AI chatbot something, and halfway through, it just goes off track? You might be discussing a simple technical fix, and suddenly it throws in random suggestions — things that don’t even exist or don’t make any sense. It’s confusing, and honestly, pretty annoying.

What makes it worse is that it often feels like the chatbot isn’t even paying attention to what you said. You give it clear details, but it either ignores them or responds with something completely unrelated. That’s exactly what this study points out. AI isn’t as reliable or “obedient” as we thought, and if you’ve used one for long enough, you’ve probably noticed it yourself.

Read more
I see Apple skipping the AI hellfire, but shaping Siri as the most flexible assistant
iPhone with Active Siri

When Apple introduced Siri back in 2011, the world freaked out. A personal assistant on a phone with conversational chops elicited an audible gasp from the audience, and plenty of fear. "That it’s a sinister, potentially alien artificial intelligence that’s bound to kill us all," CNN's coverage surmised. It was a one-of-a-kind advancement, something Apple was delivering consistently back then.

And then it fell off. Now, Siri has a reputation for being, well… not exactly the sharpest voice assistant, especially in a pool of next-gen generative AI assistants such as Claude, Gemini, and ChatGPT. Anyone who’s tried asking it a tricky question knows exactly what I mean — it's a drag to talk with Siri, and more importantly, get work done. But things are starting to shake up. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, a prolific all-things-Apple eavesdropper, shared yesterday that Siri might soon open its doors to third-party AI tools in a major iOS update. That’s right! Apple’s walled garden could finally be cracking.

Read more