Latest Breaking News On - இராணுவம் மருத்துவ பல்கலைக்கழகம் - Page 4 : vimarsana.com
Hanoi ready for largest-ever COVID-19 vaccination campaign
vietnamnet.vn - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vietnamnet.vn Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
First refresher course held for L2FH rotation 4 s personnel
en.qdnd.vn - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from en.qdnd.vn Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Este veneno de serpiente puede salvar vidas, ¿cómo lo hace?
Es impresionante.
Suscribir
Científicos de la Universidad de Ontario Occidental, en Canadá, crearon una especie de “súper pegamento” de tejido corporal basado en veneno de serpiente.
Este material ayudaría a detener el sangrado potencialmente mortal en segundos.
Kibret Mequanint, bioingeniero de la referida casa de estudios, desarrolló su descubrimiento utilizando una enzima coagulante denominada reptilasa o batroxobina. Esta se encuentra en el veneno de las llamadas serpientes lanza (Bothrops atrox) en Sudamérica.
Mequanint es ingeniero químico y bioquímico, con doctorados en la Universidad de Stellenbosch, la Universidad Técnica de Darmstadt y la Universidad McMaster. Conoce más sobre este experto
Snake venom shows promise as skin glue for closing life-threatening wounds
cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Snake Venom-Derived Super Glue Stops Bleeding In Seconds
Canadian and Chinese researchers use the venom of the lance head snake to create material that stops bleeding.
July 15, 2021
Fer de Lance. Photo by Dr. Morley Read/Shutterstock
Researchers with the University of Western Ontario have used a blood clotting enzyme called reptilase or batroxobin to create a glue that is so strong in its properties that it can stop bleeding in mere seconds.
Western University bioengineer Kibret Mequanint used the venom of the lancehead (Fer de Lance) snake (
Bothrops atrox) to develop a body tissue adhesive that is created using the batroxobin in a modified gelatin that Mequanint says can be packaged in a small tube for a potentially life-saving application.