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New clot-buster is like Liquid-Plumr for blood vessels

By | July 9, 2012, 10:46 PM PDT

By mimicking the behavior of platelets, a new drug delivery system sends clot-dissolving drugs directly to obstructed blood vessels.

Blood clots are bad news. These masses of blood cells can grow big enough to choke off veins and arteries, preventing oxygen from flowing to critical organs, ScienceNOW explains.

Platelets circulate in the blood and stop bleeding by forming clots. They naturally gravitate toward blocked vessels by sensing changes in blood flow; they’re attracted to high fluid shear stress.

So, a team led by Donald Ingber of Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering took advantage of that characteristic.

  1. They took a clump of nanoparticles about 100 nanometers wide and coated them with a clot-dissolving drug called tissue plasminogen activator (tPA).
  2. They created a drug delivery system that’s attracted to high fluid shear stress in blood vessels, just like platelets. These carry the drugs directly to narrowed blood vessels.
  3. Then they fall apart to release the tPA-coated nanoparticles when the stress reaches a certain point (pictured above).
  4. The biodegradable particles are eventually broken down by the body.
  5. They tested their new delivery system on mice with blood clots, and the system restored normal blood flow quickly.

And since the nanoparticles deposit a small amount directly on the clot, it used less tPA than what’s normally required – good news since tPA can lead to unwanted side effects, such as excessive bleeding, when administered into the blood without this sort of delivery system.

Pictured right, a blocked mouse artery with fluorescent nanoparticles accumulating around it. Watch a video of the clot-busting action.

The particles could be used to deliver essentially any drug – an anti-inflammatory to a specific spot where inflammation was occurring, for example, Ingber says.

The nanoparticles could also be used as a diagnostic tool to seek out blockages that may need to be removed surgically, since places where the nanoparticles wind up are easier to spot with ultrasound.

The work was published in Science last week.

[Via ScienceNOW, Wyss release]

Image: Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering

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Janet Fang

About Janet Fang

Janet Fang is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang
Contributing Editor

Janet Fang has written for Nature, Discover and the Point Reyes Light. She is currently a lab technician at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. She holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang

Janet does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Vitamin C and (non-synthetic) E Before Heavy Meals
This knowledge is about 20 years old in alternative-medicine circles : Ingesting 500mg of vitamin C and 400IU of non-synthetic E before fatty meals keeps arteries dilated and clean from obstructive deposits; and adding 500mg of lycine to the formula cleans out already deposited obstructions--over time (( Google "lycine, vitamin c, Linus Pauling)).
Posted by JungianINTP
14th Jul
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