Thursday, March 5, 2020
NYU Student Invents Revolutionary Medical Gel Rise of the Accidental Entrepreneur
NYU Student Invents Revolutionary Medical Gel Rise of the Accidental Entrepreneur Andres Rueda/Flickr While most college students are busy discovering the physics of beer pong, others are making revolutionary medical breakthroughs. Joe Landolina, a 20-year old New York University junior has created a lifesaving medical gel derived from plant-based polymers which mimic the human extra-cellular matrix, a substance produced by the body which initiates blood clot formation. Landolina has dubbed the substance, Veti-gel. Designed with the purpose to instantly halt bleeding, Veti-gel bonds to the surrounding flesh and forms a tight seal upon application. Not only does the gel initiate blood clot formation, but also speeds up the healing process and is effective on major wounds of internal organs and key arteries. Your cells dont fit together cell-to-cell its called an extra-cellular matrix, Landolina told the Metro New York. If you put Veti-Gel into a wound, it recognizes the existing ECM thats already there and replicates and builds onto it. It instantaneously stops bleeding and is also biocompatible, so your cells can grow into it and it helps wounds heal faster. Landolina initially tested the gel on mice and after slicing their livers and carotid arteries he was able to instantly stop the bleeding. He then began testing on slabs of fresh pork loin in which he injected pigs blood; the results of which were so successful he recorded a video of the experiment and uploaded it on YouTube for the public. In partnership with New York University graduate Isaac Miller, Landolina founded the company Suneris, Inc. as a vehicle to shuttle Veti-Gel into the veterinary market. For humans there are similar products available, very expensive but similar, but for animals, there is nothing that coagulates blood quickly enough, Landolina explained to MailOnline, I have spoken to hundreds of vets and heard how in situations where, for example, a spleen is bleeding, they would rather take the spleen out than risk waiting for any of the current products to work quickly enough. So Veti-Gel would be very well received in this industry. Each year more than 140,000 Americans die from trauma-related injuries; excessive blood loss resulting in shock and heart failure are the primary causes for trauma-related deaths. While Veti-gel is at the moment intended for veterinarian practices, Landolina hopes Veti-Gel will someday be used by the armed forces to treat major trauma victims in the field and prevent soldiers from bleeding out until they can be transported to a hospital. The gel possesses antimicrobial properties which mean itâs a safe and disinfecting way to heal a wound, which is especially important for unsanitary war zones. The idea for Veti-Gel came about from a surprising simplistic thought. When I got to NYUs engineering school, I had this idea: What if you could take something that was liquid and turn it solid using chemistry? Landolina told the Metro New York. I realized if you could take that and apply it to a bleeding wound; it would turn into a solid mass. I wondered: Could that stop bleeding?â The trend of the accidental entrepreneur, so to speak, has recently blossomed among college students. Most recognizably is Mark Zuckerberg for his founding role in the revolutionary social media website Facebook. Rather than developing a get rich quick scheme, young entrepreneurs are increasingly achieving success by developing a solution to address a problem theyve experienced personally. The mindset differs between those who build a business around a product rather than building a product around a business. That is how businesses such as Mint, Dropbox and now Suneris, Inc. got their start. With Facebook and Twitter, instantly promoting a product to a target audience was never made simpler, and if technology continues growing in this way, as will the trend of the accidental entrepreneur.
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