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Systemically Administered Hemostatic Nanoparticles for Identification and Treatment of Internal Bleeding
Authors
Hassan Albadawi
Reginald K Avery
+14 more
Conor L Evans
Manos Gkikas
Celestine Hong
Tomaz Mesar
Rahmi Oklu
Bradley D Olsen
Anushri Parakh
Manuel Patino
Thomas Peponis
Emmanuel Roussakis
Dushyant V Sahani
George Velmahos
Michael T Watkins
Hyung-Jin Yoo
Publication date
2 May 2019
Publisher
'American Chemical Society (ACS)'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
© 2019 American Chemical Society. Internal bleeding is an injury that can be difficult to localize and effectively treat without invasive surgeries. Injectable polymeric nanoparticles have been developed that can reduce clotting times and blood loss, but they have yet to incorporate sufficient diagnostic capabilities to assist in identifying bleeding sources. Herein, polymeric nanoparticles were developed to simultaneously treat internal bleeding while incorporating tracers for visualization of the nanoparticles by standard clinical imaging modalities. Addition of 1,1′-dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindodicarbocyanine perchlorate (DiD; a fluorescent dye), biotin functionality, and gold nanoparticles to hemostatic polymeric nanoparticles resulted in nanoparticles amenable to imaging with near-infrared (NIR) imaging, immunohistochemistry, and X-ray computed tomography (CT), respectively. Following a lethal liver resection injury, visualization of accumulated nanoparticles by multiple imaging methods was achieved in rodents, with the highest accumulation observed at the liver injury site, resulting in improved survival rates. Tracer addition to therapeutic nanoparticles allows for an expansion of their applicability, during stabilization by first responders to diagnosis and identification of unknown internal bleeding sites by clinicians using standard clinical imaging modalities
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The Francis Crick Institute
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Last time updated on 30/05/2019
DSpace@MIT
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oai:dspace.mit.edu:1721.1/1361...
Last time updated on 28/07/2022
DSpace@MIT
See this paper in CORE
Go to the repository landing page
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oai:dspace.mit.edu:1721.1/1361...
Last time updated on 19/12/2021