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Surgeons battle time and the body's defenses as
they stitch together veins and arteries, whether after an injury or in
the course of such treatments as transplants or bypasses. Loss of
blood before a site is closed and too much clotting soon after
challenge medical care.
Virginia Tech researchers are creating
biocompatible adhesives for use with vascular tissue that will speed
the process of mending tissue. They will present the research at the
227th annual meeting of the American Chemical Society in Anaheim,
Calif., March 28 through April 1, 2004.
The goal is to make it possible for surgeons to
splice, reattach, or mend vascular tissue by applying a biopolymer
coating and activating it with light, such as a laser, explains
Timothy Long of Blacksburg, professor of chemistry in the College of
Science at Virginia Tech. Another use would be as a stable,
easy-to-use material that medics could apply to stop bleeding and
prevent clotting.
Chemistry doctoral student Afia S. Karikari will
explain the structure and characteristics of the novel polymer, how
light causes it to change shape and function, and what the researchers
have determined about the properties of several compounds that are
candidates for a material that could make laser assisted vascular
repair possible.
Karikari, a Packard Fellow, is a graduate of Clark
Atlanta University. A native of Ghana, West Africa, she moved to the
United States with her family and attended Pebblebrook High School in
Mableton, Ga.
She will present the paper, "Photocrosslinking of
star-shaped poly(d,l-lactide)s containing an ethoxylate core (Poly
368)" at 8:50 a.m. Tuesday, March 30, 2004, in the Garden B room of
the Anaheim Coast Hotel. Co-authors are Craig Thatcher, professor and
department head of large animal clinical sciences in the
VirginiaMaryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine, and Long. |