Bacteriosynthetic Degradable Tranexamic Acid-Functionalized Short Fibers for Inhibiting Invisible Hemorrhage

SMALL(2023)

Cited 0|Views18
No score
Abstract
Current research on hemostatic materials have focused on the inhibition of visible hemorrhage, however, invisible hemorrhage is the unavoidable internal bleeding that occurs after trauma or surgery, leading directly to a dramatic drop in hemoglobin and then to anemia and even death. In this study, bacterial nanocellulose (BNC) was synthesized and oxidized from the primary alcohols to carboxyl groups, and then grafted with tranexamic acid through amide bonds to construct degradable nanoscale short fibers (OBNC-TXA), which rapidly activated the coagulation response. The hemostatic material is made up of nanoscale short fibers that can be constructed into different forms such as emulsions, gels, powders, and sponges to meet different clinical applications. In the hemostatic experiments in vitro, the composites had significantly superior pro-coagulant properties due to the rapid aggregation of blood cells. In the coagulation experiments with rat tail amputation and liver trauma hemorrhage models, the group treated with OBNC-TXA1 sponge showed low hemorrhage and inhibited invisible hemorrhage in rectus abdominis muscle defect hemorrhage models, with a rapid recovery of hemoglobin values from 128 & PLUSMN;5.5 to 165 & PLUSMN;2.6 g L-1 within 4 days. In conclusion, the degradable short fibers constructed from bacterial nano-cellulose achieved inhibition of invisible hemorrhage in vivo.
More
Translated text
Key words
tranexamic acid‐functionalized,short fibers
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined