3.9 Article

Nano-hemostats and a Pilot Study of Their Use in a Large Animal Model of Major Vessel Hemorrhage in Endoscopic Skull Base Surgery

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY PART B-SKULL BASE
Volume 78, Issue 3, Pages 215-221

Publisher

THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1597277

Keywords

endoscopic transsphenoidal surgery; hemorrhage control; nano-medicine; pituitary surgery; internal carotid artery injury

Funding

  1. NeuroSurgical Research Foundation, Adelaide

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Nano-hemostats are synthetic amino acid chains that self-assemble into a scaffold under certain conditions. These have been shown to be effective in stopping bleeding in small animal models of hemorrhage. Proposed mechanisms for their effect are that they form a mesh analogous to the fibrin plug in native hemostasis and that they may potentiate both platelet activation and the coagulation cascade. These may potentially become valuable adjuncts to endoscopic skull base surgery where there is the potential for both major vessel injury and smaller perforator injury to eloquent areas where bipolar cautery may not be suitable. We present a summary of the clinical studies to date and a small pilot study of nano-hemostat in an endoscopic sheep model of major vessel hemorrhage to determine its efficacy in stopping bleeding in this potentially catastrophic complication.

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