Can a perfume ingredient stop massive bleeds and save lives?
The chances of surviving massive blood loss from a traumatic injury such as a gunshot wound are around 50 percent. To survive, a patient needs two things to happen quickly: a large infusion of blood and coagulation at the wound to stop the bleeding.
The problem is one of these solutions prevents the other. Introducing a large amount of blood to those suffering a massive hemorrhage impairs the blood’s ability to clot, a condition known as coagulopathy.
Tulane University researchers have uncovered the cause of coagulopathy in trauma victims receiving a blood infusion. They also found that a synthetic compound called dimethyl malonate-often used in perfume manufacturing-has the potential to stop coagulopathy during a massive hemorrhage. The researchers’ findings are part of a new study published in Science Advances.
The study found that, during blood loss, a person’s cells lack the oxygen to metabolize succinate, a key part of the cell’s energy-generating cycle. Unable to be metabolized, the succinate builds up. When a large amount of blood is infused into a trauma victim – the succinate is metabolized too quickly, which leads to a change in the structure of the plasma membrane lipids. This exposes the glycocalyx, allows it to be chewed up by enzymes, and mixes the shreds into the bloodstream, where it prevents clotting.
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