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A new wound-treatment spray could help, as it kills bacteria using peptides that occur naturally in our bodies – no antibiotics required. While previous studies had explored the use of such ...
Aug. 2, 2012 -- An experimental spray-on skin product may help people with chronic leg wounds heal faster and more effectively than available treatments, a new study suggests. People in the study ...
The Nanomedic spray method avoids any need to come into direct contact with the wound. In that sense, it completely sidesteps painful routine bandage dressings. The transient skin then fully ...
A group of researchers are now presenting a new spray that can kill even antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and that can be used for wound care and directly on implants and other medical devices.
A woman lost 1/3 of her skin due to flesh-eating bacteria and her wounds were healed with an experimental spray. An operation performed in January 2018 in Western France. A woman lost 1/3 of her ...
The spray is currently being trialled as a treatment for severe burn wounds. To make the spray, doctors take a small patch of skin from another part of the patient’s body. A special enzyme is ...
“The spray application makes it very easy to apply to the wound, and its thermo-reversible properties allow the gel to adhere to the skin on contact and makes it very easy to rinse off with cool ...
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued BC3 Technologies, Inc. patent US12,263,185 for its hemostatic material and spray method of treating a bleeding wound of a human or an animal.
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