Oxygen therapeutics: perfluorocarbons and blood substitute safety.

TitleOxygen therapeutics: perfluorocarbons and blood substitute safety.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsCohn CS, Cushing MM
JournalCrit Care Clin
Volume25
Issue2
Pagination399-414, Table of Contents
Date Published2009 Apr
ISSN1557-8232
KeywordsBlood Substitutes, Erythrocyte Transfusion, Fluorocarbons, Humans, Oxygen
Abstract

Current demands over the blood supply in developed and developing nations will compound over time. Red cell substitutes have a promising value proposition for transfusion services, because they hold the promise of increasing the availability of blood products and removing donor and contamination safety risks. In this article, the authors note that existing products suffer from critical shortcomings such as vasoactivity; they also point out that substitutes not based on human blood introduce potentially more complex safety hurdles. The authors discuss the attributes of an ideal blood substitute, and the mechanism and current status of perfluorocarbons; they also review the shortcomings of all oxygen therapeutic products in development today.

DOI10.1016/j.ccc.2008.12.007
Alternate JournalCrit Care Clin
PubMed ID19341916
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