Tag Archives: oxide

Nanoparticles may treat blood loss

Scientists have used tiny particles called nanoparticles to improve survival after life-threatening blood loss.

The advance by scientists at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University could improve battlefield and trauma care.

Nanoparticles containing nitric oxide (NO) were infused into the bloodstream of hamsters, where they helped maintain blood circulation and protect vital organs.

“The new nanomedicine was developed to address the need for better field treatments for massive human blood loss, which can cause cardiovascular collapse, also known as hemorrhagic shock. This potentially fatal condition is best treated with infusions of refrigerated blood and other fluids. But such treatments are limited to emergency rooms or trauma centers.

Nanoparticles

Nanoparticles

“It is highly impractical to pack these supplies for use in rural emergencies, mass-casualty disasters or on the battlefield,” said coauthor Joel Friedman, professor of physiology and medicine and of medicine and the Young Men”s Division Chair in Physiology at Einstein.

“Our nanoparticle therapy may offer the potential for saving lives in those situations. It”s lightweight and compact and doesn”t require refrigeration.”

The new therapy counters hemorrhagic shock by increasing the body”s levels of NO gas, which, among other physiological functions, relaxes blood vessels and regulates blood pressure. The gas was encased in microscopic-sized particles that were specially designed by the Einstein team. (NO is so short-lived that delivering it in therapeutic amounts requires a method of sustained release.)


The therapy is created by adding the NO-containing nanoparticles to saline solution, which was then infused into the animals. Once in the body, the nanoparticles gradually release a sustained dose of NO to tissues.

The research has been published in the online edition of the journal Resuscitation.

Eat your spinach

Popeye’s secret has been revealed – it is the nitrates and not the iron in spinach that make him strong.

The chemical, abundant in green leafy vegetables, boosts the part of the cell that provides it with energy.

A single helping of spinach is enough to increase the efficiency of mitochondria, small bean-shaped bodies which fuel cell activity and growth.

And in a surprising twist, scientists found Popeye’s nemesis Pluto need only have handed him mouthwash to wipe out the vegetable’s beneficial effect.

Spinach is well-known as the superfood that gave Popeye the Sailor Man his bulging muscles.

The famous cartoon character, who dates back to the 1930s, pops open a can of spinach whenever he needs to get out of trouble.

Originally it was thought that the iron content of spinach made it a power-food. Now scientists have learned that nitrates are the true energy-boosting ingredient in the vegetable.

Spinach

Spinach

Green leafy vegetables of all kinds are rich in the inorganic chemical which until recently was not thought to have any nutritional value.

‘We’re talking about an amount of nitrate equivalent to what is found in two or three red beets or a plate of spinach,’ said lead researcher Professor Eddie Weitzberg, from the Karolinska Institute in Sweden.

‘We know that diets rich in fruits and vegetables can help prevent cardiovascular disease and diabetes, but the active nutrients haven’t been clear. This shows inorganic nitrate as a candidate to explain those benefits.’

Previously Professor Weitzberg and colleague Professor Jon Lundberg showed that dietary nitrate increases levels of nitric oxide in the body with the help of friendly bacteria.


Nitric oxide is an important molecule which opens up blood vessels, lowers blood pressure, and improves circulation.

The new research shows that nitrates make mitochondria by making them less ‘leaky’. This has the effect of increasing their efficiency as biological machines.

Professor Weitzberg’s findings are published today in the journal Cell Metabolism.

Spinach

Spinach

An odd implication of the research is that mouthwash may reduce the benefits of nitrates.

Bacteria in the mouth are needed to provide the first step in the pathway that uses nitrates to generate nitric oxide.

‘In our view, strong mouthwashes are not good if you want this system to work,’ said Professor Weitzberg.