Skip to content

October 27, 2015

Nanofiber gel and snake venom work together to stop the bleeding

by John_A

Brazil Snakes

Researchers at Rice University announced a novel use for batroxobin, a hemotoxic component in the venom of two South American pit viper species. They’ve figured out how to leverage it as a potent coagulant — when combined with a nanofiber hydrogel called SB50 — that could save countless lives in surgery. Medical science has actually been employing batroxobin as a topical clotting agent and thrombosis treatment since the mid 1930s. Used along with the gel, now it’s shown a capability to stop the flow of blood even if the patient is on heparin, a powerful anticoagulant administered before some surgeries.

Via: Rice University Newsroom

Source: Rice University

Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments