A startup based in Cambridge, MA, says that it plans to soon begin clinical
trials of a nanostructured material that stops bleeding almost instantly. A
startup called Arch
Therapeutics has licensed the technology from MIT and is developing
manufacturing processes for making it in large amounts.
The new material can be poured over a site and will stop the bleeding almost
at once.
The first application, pending Food and Drug
Administration approval, will be for use during surgery to quickly stop bleeding
and even prevent it in the first place. Floyd Loop, currently an advisor to Arch
Therapeutics, and formerly a cardiovascular surgeon and the head of Cleveland Clinic, says
that it could be useful in a wide variety of surgeries, including brain, heart,
and prostate. For example, he says that when large tumors are removed, "there's
a lot of diffuse bleeding around the site, and you have to spend a lot of time
with sponges and cautery stopping it." Read More...