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  Biopure Corporation to Collaborate with US Navy for Further Development of Hemopure
 
 

Biopure Corporation (Nasdaq:BPUR), which develops, manufactures and markets pharmaceuticals (oxygen therapeutics), said on 8 May that the company has entered into a collaboration with the US Naval Medical Research Center (NMRC) for the development of Hemopure (HBOC-201) as a platform for the first multifunction blood substitute for trauma patients.

NMRC has reportedly received new funding of approximately USD3.4m for Hemopure (HBOC-201). These funds are being granted through the Department of Defense for a project entitled: 'A Multifunctional Blood Substitute for Field Resuscitation of Polytrauma Combat Casualties with Brain Injury and Concomitant Hemorrhagic Shock'.

The preclinical work towards a multifunctional product for traumatic brain injury is expected to be conducted by the NMRC itself and other laboratories. The project is part of the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder/Traumatic Brain Injury Research Programme of the Office of the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programmes.

Biopure said it will support the NMRC's efforts toward lifting the clinical hold on the NMRC's investigational new drug application to conduct the pending, proposed clinical trial in trauma patients entitled: 'Restore Effective Survival in Shock' (RESUS).

 
  (C)2008 M2 Communications Ltd
 
3. Answers

Q: Why is handwashing so important with IV therapy?

A: Any time anything such as an intravenous catheter penetrates the skin, there is a break in the skin's protective system, and therefore the possibility exists of that area, another affected area or blood becoming infected.

Organisms that ordinarily live on the skin can become harmful if they enter the body. Most infection is spread by hand contact; hands and fingers carry the most organisms. Because your IV catheter and IV site need to remain as clean as possible, everything touching them must be sterile. This is why you must wash your hands before you put on gloves to change your dressing or perform other care of your IV site.

It's equally important to wash your hands thoroughly afterward so that you do not spread any potential infection to other people or other parts of your body.

 
 
 
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