Chitosan-based lifefoam improves survival in lethal noncompressible abdominal bleeding in swine

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Abstract

Background: In military combat settings, noncompressible closed cavity exsanguination is the leading cause of potentially survivable deaths, with no effective treatment available at point of injury. The aim of this study was to assess whether an expanding foam based on hydrophobically modified chitosan (hm-chitosan) may be used as a locally injectable hemostatic agent for the treatment of noncompressible bleeding in a swine model. Methods: A closed-cavity, grade V hepato-portal injury was created in all animals resulting in massive noncoagulopathic, noncompressible bleeding. Animals received either fluid resuscitation alone (control, n = 8) or fluid resuscitation plus intraperitoneal hm-chitosan agent through an umbilical port (experimental, n = 18). The experiment was terminated at 180 minutes or death (defined as end-tidal CO2 <8mmHg or mean arterial pressure [MAP] <15mmHg), whichever came first. Results: All animals had profound hypotension and experienced a near-arrest from hypovolemic shock (mean MAP = 24 mmHg at 10 minutes). Mean survival time was higher than 150 minutes in the experimental arm versus 27 minutes in the control arm (P

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Naar, L., Dorken Gallastegi, A., Dowling, M., Mashbari, H. N. A., Wallace, B., Bankhead-Kendall, B., … King, C. D. R. (2022). Chitosan-based lifefoam improves survival in lethal noncompressible abdominal bleeding in swine. Surgery (United States), 172(1), 421–426. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surg.2022.01.016

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