Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
Alternative blood products
Dr Ross Hofmeyr wildmedic at gmail.comFri Mar 21 11:31:07 GMT 2008
- Previous message: Alternative blood products
- Next message: Alternative blood products
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Hello Sa'ad my old friend ;) I gather by your mail that you attacked the primaries - well done! The real experts on the chitsoan products are the military crowd, with battlefield dressings and haemostatics being the predominant use. I = haven't seen it in SA, or heard of civilian use, although I am willing to be corrected. (The only haemostatic I've seen in SA is TraumaDex, which = uses tranexamic acid). Chitosan is a linear polysaccharide derived from the exoskeleton of crustaceans (esp. shrimp) that contributes to very rapid clotting of blood via an ionic reaction between the positively-charged chitosan granules and negatively charged RBC's. I'm afraid I don't have any archived articles, but there was porcine research in J. Trauma in 2003 that showed a dramatic reduction in blood = loss using a chitosan impregnated bandage compared to gauze(Pusateri, A. E., = S. J. McCarthy, K. W. Gregory, R. A. Harris, L. Cardenas, A. T. McManus & = C. W. Goodwin Jr. (2003). Effect of a chitosan-based hemostatic dressing on = blood loss and survival in a model of severe venous hemorrhage and hepatic = injury in swine. Journal of Trauma 4 (1): 177-182) - perhaps some-one on the = list can cough it up. Bovine haemoglobin is the substrate used in the haemoglobin based oxygen carriers (HBOC's) - the one you may have heard of in SA is Hemopure. = The principle of an HBOC is precisely the oxygen bridge you mention - in = acute anaemia or traumatic blood loss where blood is not available, one can administer an HBOC which raises the plasma haemoglobin (it's an = acellular solution) to the point where O2 carrying capacity is life-sustaining. = The products have a limited half-life, but can be administered until blood products become available, or the acute crisis has passed. There are = some other benefits that are being investigated - the fact that the Hb is in = the plasma rather than cells means that it can theoretically pass through smaller or partially occluded vessels, thus preserving ischaemic tissue = that would otherwise have infacted. There is research being done in CT = surgery, and people are looking at it for management of certain types of wounds, including frostbite. Another advantage (disclaimer: depending on your school of thought) is that the HBOC's are a hypertonic solution, = allowing hypertonic, small-volume resus in haemorrhaging patients. Other upsides include small physical volume, 3 year shelf-life, and no special storage requirements. The downsides? Well, it's not blood - it does nothing = for clotting. Too rapid administration can result in a spike in BP. There = have been reports of renal failure (seems to be predominantly with the older HBOC's). Costly. (Is that worth 8 marks?) I have some articles that I gathered while I was pushing for a supply of HBOC here in Antarctica and aboard the ship that I can forward should = you wish. Will be holding thumbs for you when the results are out! Regards, Ross. Dr Ross Hofmeyr Expedition Leader & Doctor South African National Antarctic Expedition ross.hofmeyr at sanane.sanap.ac.za wildmedic at gmail.com ross at wildmedix.com www.wildmedix.com Tel: +2721 405 9428 Skype: wildmedic =93Semper Paratus=94 > -----Original Message----- > From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list- > bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Sa'ad Lahri > Sent: 21 March 2008 07:19 AM > To: trauma-list at trauma.org > Subject: Alternative blood products >=20 > Hi all >=20 > Got asked the following two questions in our Emergency Medicine basic > sciences exam. Could you help with either resources or a short = explanation > and your current experience. >=20 > 1.write short notes on chitosan products as adjuncts to haemorrhage > control including their mechanism of action (7 marks) >=20 > 2.discuss the role of bovine haemoglobin as an oxygen bridge where = blood > products are not available (8 marks) >=20 > I have no experience using either of these products >=20 > kind regards > Sa'ad >=20 >=20 > Dr Sa'ad Lahri > Emergency Medicine Registrar > UCT/US > Cape Town > South Africa >=20 >=20 >=20 > ------------------------------------------- > South Africas premier free email service - www.webmail.co.za > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > For super low premiums, click here http://www.webmail.co.za/dd.pwm >=20 > -- > trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG > To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: > http://www.trauma.org/index.php?/community/ >=20 > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG. > Version: 7.5.519 / Virus Database: 269.21.8/1337 - Release Date: > 2008/03/20 08:10 PM >=20 No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG.=20 Version: 7.5.519 / Virus Database: 269.21.8/1337 - Release Date: = 2008/03/20 08:10 PM =20
- Previous message: Alternative blood products
- Next message: Alternative blood products
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
