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What if you stop a life -threatening bleeding can be as simple as gel is introduced? It Promise of traumagelThe initial plant -based bleeding gel is now used by the first respondents across the country, including the Metro Atlanta fire service, which recently used it to save its own.
Designed by Cresilon CEO and co -founder Joe Landalin, traumagel works in seconds to control the bloodstream from gunshot wounds and other traumatic injuries. It comes in a compact 30 ml syringe and can be quickly applied in the field before the patient bleeds, the risk responsible for more than 35% of all the pre-peply deaths.
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The syringe gel -traumas sits in front of its package. (Cresson)
The story for Traumagel begins with a teenager in the winery laboratory. Joe Landalin, now Cresilon CEO, has developed this technology when he was only 17.
“My grandfather was a pensioner who owned a vineyard in the northern state of New York,” Landalin explains. “I would work near him in my lab winery every day after school from a young age. At this time I developed a strong love for chemistry, especially on plant chemistry from the ingredients found in nature around me.”
This love has turned into research. “At the age of 17, I experimented with the polymers extracted from the cellular walls of the algae, and discovered a matrix that instantly connects with a living cloth,” he said.
He took this idea for a Business Planning Competition in New York, and Krasilon was born. The company now works with 55,000 square feet of bioproduction in Brooklyn with almost 100 employees.
The traumagel works in seconds to control the bloodstream from severe injuries. (Cresson)
Injury already Changing how doctors respond in high pressure injuries.
“The traumagel has influenced how we respond to traumatic injuries in any situation,” says Lieutenant David Kleiman of the Cobb Fire Service. “In the past, with covered injuries such as neck, armpit or groin, we used traditional methods such as digital pressure or wound packaging. This required several crews and it took time.
“We can manage a hemostatic remedy with traumagel that controls blood flow in seconds,” he continues. “Crews can go to faster estimates and treatments and make the patient get care faster.”
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In one of the recent cases, the Kob Fire District was injured during an answer in an abandoned house. He stumbled on the hill, cut his hand on the broken glass and tried to stop the bleeding. But it failed.
“In the end, he realized that he could not control the bleeding and return to the engine,” Kleiman recalls. “The crew noted that he was pale and sweaty and that his Yaivsky transmission was full of blood. Traditional methods could not, so they injured. It instantly stopped the bleeding.”
Then the fireman was treated with blood loss and fully recovered after surgery.
CRSILON CEO and co -founder Joe Landolina (in the center) and his team are standing with the fire and emergency service of Cobb. (Cresson)
Cresilon’s bleeding gel undergoes even more demanding conditions.
“In addition to injuring all the first respondents across the country,” says Landalin, “Our own technology is studied for wider applications US Department of Defense Institute of Research Army Walter Reed. “
This study focuses on penetrating traumatic injuries (TBI). “Previous conclusions have demonstrated promising results in the ability of our technology to control blood flow and provide neuroprotection after TBI,” he says. The team plans to conduct further research based on these results.
Severe bleeding is the number one cause of death from injury. With injuries, a quick group can control this bleeding even before the patient enters the hospital. This tool is not only for Battlefield or Professional EMS medicine. In the future, you could see it in hospitals, dental offices and even first aid kits. The traumagel can become a new standard in the emergency control of blood flow, meaning faster care, better results and more lives.
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From the laboratory experiment of the teenager to the rescue instrument, which trusts the fire unit, the traumaler redorates the reaction to the injury. It is fast, efficient and easy to use, exactly what you need to react first when the time is over. As more and more ambulances, hospitals and ambulance staff are taking the gel, its potential in life savings continues to grow.
Is it worth every firefighter in the US to carry this gel? Want a traumahel in your home on your first aid? Tell us by writing us in Cyberguy.com/contact
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