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New York based startup has developed a gel capable of sealing even the most
severe bleeding wounds in mere seconds. The plant-based polymer is on the
course to save human lives after already being tested in veterinarian use on
animals, RT.com reports.
Time has been of the essence in trying to
save patients suffering from an open flesh wound, because if the bleeding isn’t
stopped in time, the patient will die from bleeding out. And while there are
various similar gels on the market, they can stop the bleeding in up to 10
minutes, while VetiGel, according the inventors, can get the job done in
maximum 20 seconds.
Brooklyn based startup Suneris’s gel works on both skin and organ tissues by
binding with components in blood and tissue . The plant cell wall polymers in
the gel, when applied to the wound, duplicate the structure of the tissue.
“By
reassembling onto a wound site, VETIGEL mimics the body’s extracellular matrix
and accelerates the production of fibrin, which enables the body to clot
rapidly,” Suneris explains on its website.
So basically when the gel
is applied part of it transforms on to the internal surface of a bleeding
organ, another to broken blood vessel, and the outer part mimics the skin,
eventually making the bleeding stop. The gel uses natural polymers to
coordinate with the body’s natural cell clotting and accelerate hemostasis. It
is applied directly to the source of bleeding and does not require manual
pressure during treatment.
The
gel technology, brainchild of Joe Landolina, a bio-molecular chemical engineer
and a former student of the Polytechnic Institute of NYU, not only stops
bleeding but has proven to be exceptionally strong. After the gel has been
applied to the wound, an accompanying solidifying polymerizing agent is sprayed
to form a seal barrier over the wound.
VetiGel
has undergone animal testing under the supervision of a cardiovascular surgeon,
and was determined to be safe enough for use for veterinarians. Landolina hopes
that VetiGel will soon be used by the armed forces in the field to treat major
trauma victims and prevent them from bleeding out until they get to hospital.
Although the gel technology
is certainly revolutionary, it's technically not the only idea science has had
for stemming bleeding: another technology being proposed for the US armed
forces utilizes a syringe with micro-sponges that can fill up an open wound in
15 seconds.
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