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January 12, 2012

New way to stop the bleeding

 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) engineers have developed a nanoscale biological coating that can halt bleeding nearly instantaneously, an advance that could dramatically improve survival rates for soldiers injured in battle.
 Ferrosan Medical Devices, created a spray coating that includes thrombin, a clotting agent found in blood. Sponges coated with this material can be stored stably and easily carried by soldiers or medical personnel.

Uncontrolled bleeding is the leading cause of trauma death on the battlefield. Traditional methods to halt bleeding, such as tourniquets, are not suitable for the neck and many other parts of the body. In recent years, researchers have tried alternative approaches, all of which have some disadvantages. Fibrin dressings and glues have a short shelf life and can cause an adverse immune response, and zeolite powders are difficult to apply under windy conditions and can cause severe burns. Another option is bandages made of chitosan, a derivative of the primary structural material of shellfish exoskeletons. Those bandages have had some success but can be difficult to mould to fit complex wounds.
Many civilian hospitals use a highly absorbent gelatine sponge produced by Ferrosan to stop bleeding. However, those sponges need to be soaked in liquid thrombin just before application to the wound, making them impractical for battlefield use. Hammond’s team came up with the idea to coat the sponges with a blood-clotting agent in advance, so they would be ready when needed, for either military or civilian use.
To do that, the researchers developed a nanoscale biological coating that consists of two alternating layers sprayed onto a material, such as the sponges used in this study. The researchers discovered that layers of thrombin, a natural clotting protein, and tannic acid, a small molecule found naturally in tea, yield a film containing large amounts of functional thrombin. Both materials are already approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, which could help with the approval process for a commercialized version of the sponges, Shukla says.
A key advantage of the spray method is that it allows a large amount of thrombin to be packed into the sponges, coating even the interior fibres, says Dr David King, a trauma surgeon and instructor in surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital who was not involved in this research.
“All of the existing haemostatic materials suffer from the same limitation, which is being able to deliver a dense enough package of haemostatic material to the bleeding site. That’s why this new material is exciting,” says King, also an Army reservist who has served in Afghanistan as chief of trauma surgery.
Once sprayed, the sponges can be stored for months before use. The sponges can also be moulded to fit the shape of any wound. “Now we have an alternative that could be used without applying a large amount of pressure and can conform to a variety of wounds, because the sponges are so malleable,” Shukla says.
In tests with animals at Ferrosan, the coated sponges were applied to wounds, with light pressure (from a human thumb), for 60 seconds — and stopped the bleeding within that time. Sponges lacking thrombin required at least 150 seconds to stop the bleeding. A simple gauze patch, applied for 12 minutes (the length of the experiment), did not stop the bleeding.
The researchers have filed a patent application on this technology and on similar sponges coated with the antibiotic vancomycin. Hammond’s lab is now working on combining the blood-clotting and antibiotic activities in a single sponge.
by Akshaya Srikanth

Pharm.D India: Fourth IPA Students Congress Annoncement

Pharm.D India: Fourth IPA Students Congress Annoncement

Novel Urine Test to Diagnose Acute Kidney Failure

A simple Novel urine test helps diagnose acute kidney failure (AKI), shows study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

In an international, multi-center study, researchers at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center; Staten Island University Hospital; and Charité-Universitätsmedizin, Max Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine, and Helios Clinics, Berlin, Germany, took a single measure of five urinary biomarkers from 1,635 emergency room patients upon their admission to the hospital. Although all five biomarkers were elevated in cases of iAKI (intrinsic AKI, the most severe form of AKI), the biomarker called uNGAL was most accurate in the diagnosis of iAKI and best predicted its duration and severity. uNGAL, along with another biomarker, called Kim-1, most accurately predicted death or the need to start dialysis during hospitalization. uNGAL was discovered at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center and at Cincinnati Children''s Hospital; it was measured in this study by Abbott''s ARCHITECT-NGAL assay, which is available commercially outside the US. 

"The ability to identify acute kidney damage while the patient is in triage is especially important in busy urban hospitals, where patients cannot wait for repetitive measures of creatinine and are frequently lost to follow-up," said senior author Jonathan Barasch, MD, PhD, associate professor of medicine and of anatomy and cell biology at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and a kidney specialist at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/The Allen Hospital. "The use of urinary biomarkers could also be of great use to the military, at disaster sites, and in other situations where quick medical decisions must be made." 

"Combining urinary biomarkers such as uNGAL with the current standard marker creatinine will significantly improve the identification of patients at risk of death or dialysis in the hospital," added Dr. Kai Schmidt-Ott, MD, a kidney specialist at Charité Berlin, research group leader at the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, and adjunct assistant professor at Columbia University Medical Center. "Identifying these patients at the earliest possible time in the emergency room may enable us to introduce new treatment options to improve their outcomes." 


Source:NEWSWISE

by
AKSHAYA SRIKANTH
Pharm.D Internee
FIP-YPG Project Associate

Retail Pharmacist

Retail pharmacists dispense medications at drug stores or grocery stores. In retail settings, the pharmacist compounds drugs, orders supplies when necessary, may advise physicians on drug interactions, and dispenses medications to people with prescriptions. Retail Pharmacists are also commonly known as Community Pharmacists and have a wide range of responsibilities.
These include
processing prescriptions,
maintenance of patient medication records,
health promotion,
patient medication,
counselling,
primary health care,
specialized patient medication administration systems services to patients with particular needs,
domiciliary care,
nursing home and private hospital services,
therapeutic device supply and fitting,
providing expert advice to medical practitioners and other health professionals.
A pharmacist cannot give medications to those without prescriptions unless the medications are legally sold over the counter. They are further responsible for making patients understand how to properly use prescription drugs. Many pharmacists maintain records on patients, when patients use the same pharmacy for all their prescriptions, to be certain that no medications the patient currently takes conflicts with newly prescribed drugs.
Duties of a Retail Pharmacist:
1. Prepares or supervises the preparation of liquid medicines, ointments, powders, tablets and other medications.
2. Checks prescriptions for correct dosage and for drug interactions and incompatibilities.
3. Compounds prescribed medicines, and packages and labels them.
4. Stores and preserves vaccines, serums and other drugs subject to deterioration.
5. Contact physicians and benefit providers as necessary to process a prescription.
6. Verify all patient information before filling a prescription.
7. Sells non-prescription drugs, sick-room supplies, toiletries, cosmetics and related commercial products.
8. Provides advice and information on the use and effects of medications.
9. Records prescriptions dispensed, and the issue of poisons, narcotics and other restricted drugs. Its commonly seen that retail pharmacy is a flourishing career for many for those who have completed their B. Pharma degree and has proper license requirements.
Retail pharmacists administer medications at drug stores or grocery stores. When we look at our villages and even metro cities, many of them are using their degrees to procure licence and then sublet their pharmacy store to others to run. They do not follow any norms, become so called doctors, prescribe medicines; push medicines which they feel will fetch them better margins, or have come under schemes from the pharma companies. They are so called marketers for the pharma companies. They do not care about the prescriptions.
by
Akshaya Srikanth,
Pharm.D*


Fourth IPA Students Congress Annoncement



FORMULAS AND RULES FOR PREVENTION OF HEART ATTACKS Akshaya Srikanth*, Chandra Babu.Singanamala

One can prevent heart attacks. Nine preventable risk factors are responsible for 90% of heart attacks. They are (in order of importance) 

  1. Increased LDL/HDL ratios (elevated bad LDL and low good HDL cholesterol levels)
  2. Smoking
  3. Diabetes
  4. Hypertension
  5. Abdominal obesity
  6. Psychosocial (stress or depression)
  7. Failure to eat fruits and vegetables daily
  8. Failure to exercise
  9. Failure to drink adequate water

One can prevent heart attack by following Doctors excellence formula of eighty

  1. Keep lower BP, bad cholesterol levels, resting heart rate, fasting sugar and abdominal girth levels all less than 80.
  2. Keep kidney and lung functions more than 80%.
  3. Engage in recommended amounts of physical activity (minimum 80 minutes of moderately strenuous exercise per week). Our recommendation is to walk 80 minutes a day and for 80 minutes per week the speed should be 80 steps per minute
  4. Eat less and not more than 80 gm or ml of caloric food each meal.  Follow a healthy diet (high fiber, low saturated fat, zero trans fat, low refined carbohydrate, low salt, high in fruits). Refined carbohydrates are white rice white maida and white sugar.
  5. Observe cereal fast 80 days a year.
  6. Doing 80 cycles of pranayama a day
  7. Spend 80 minutes to yourself every day (relaxation, meditation, helping others etc)
  8. Do not smoke or be ready to spit out 80,000 Rs for treatment. Not smoking or else you will have to spend 80,000 on your illness.
  9. Those who drink, does not want to stop and there is no contraindication, limiting alcohol use to no more than 80 ml per day for men (50% for women) or 80 grams per week. 10 grams of alcohol is present in 30 ml or 1 oz of 80 proof liquor.
  10. Take 80 mg of aspirin if prescribed for prevention.
  11. Tale 80 mg atorvastatin for prevention when prescribed.

One can prevent diabetes by controlling five lifestyle factors. They are

  1. Follow a healthy diet
  2. Maintain an optimal body weight (less than 23 x height in meters x height in meters)
  3. Engage in recommended amounts of physical activity.
  4. Limiting alcohol to recommended amount.
  5. Not smoking.

Rules

  1. Rule of 30 seconds: Chest pain, burning, discomfort, heaviness in the center of the chest lasting for over 30 seconds and not localized to a point unless proved otherwise is a heat pain.
  2. Rule of pin pointing finger: any chest pain which can be pin pointed by a finger is not a heart pain.
  3. Rule of forty: First onset acidity or first onset asthma after the age of 40, first rule out heart attack or heart asthma
  4. Rule of 300:  Chew a tablet of water soluble 300 mg aspirin and take 300 mg Clopidogrel tablet at the onset of cardiac chest pain. You will not die.
  5. Rule of ten:   Within ten minute of death for the next ten minutes do effective chest compression with a speed of (10 x10) 100 per minute. 80% people can be saved.
  6. Rule of 180: Reach hospital within 180 minutes in heart attack for receiving clot dissolving angioplasty or clot dissolving drugs

Prepared and Presented by
Akshaya Srikanth, Dr.S.Chandra Babu*
Pharm.D* Internee, Asst.Prof of Medicine
RIMS MEDICAL COLLEGE, KADAPA, A.P
India

APPSC DRUG INSPECTOR IN A.P. DRUGS CONTROL ADMINISTRATION SERVICE


Recruitment applications are invited On-line through the proforma Application to be made available on WEBSITE (www.apspsc.gov.in) in from 22/02/2012 to 22/03/2012 (Note: 20/03/2012 is the last date for payment of fee) for recruitment to the post of Drug Inspector in A.P. Drugs Control Administration Service
WRITTEN TEST PATERN
WRITTEN (OBJECTIVE TYPE) EXAMINATION
1 GENERAL STUDIES & MENTAL ABILITY
150 Marks
150 Questions.
150 Minutes
2 SUBJECT (ONE PAPER)
300 Marks
150 Questions
150 Minutes
TOTAL: 450 Marks
Syllabus:
GENERAL STUDIES & MENTAL ABILITY
1. General Science – Contemporary developments in Science and Technology and their implications including matters of every day observation and experience, as may be expected of a well-educated person who has not made a special study of any scientific discipline.
2. Current events of national and international importance
3. History of India – emphasis will be on broad general understanding of the subject in its social, economic, cultural and political aspects with a focus on AP Indian National Movement.
4. World Geography and Geography of India with a focus on AP.
5. Indian polity and Economy – including the country’s political system- rural development – Planning and economic reforms in India.
6. Mental ability – reasoning and inferences.
7. Disaster Management (Source : CBSE Publications) Concepts in disaster management and vulnerability profile of India / State of A.P. Earth quakes / Cyclones / Tsunami / Floods / Drought – causes and effects. Man made disasters – Prevention strategies. Mitigation strategies / Mitigation measures.
SUBJECT
1. Importance of various Pharmacopeas with special reference to Indian Pharmacopoes, British Pharmacopea, Unites States Pharmacopoea and International Pharmacopoes.
2. Sources of drugs: Plant, Animal, Mineral, Synthetic and Biotechnological drugs.
3. Preparation of Infusions, Decoctions, Tinctures, Solutions, Soft and Dry extracts. Introduction and classification of various pharmaceutical dosage forms.
4. Various parts of “Prescription” handling of prescriptions preliminary knowledge of important Latin terms useful in interpretation of prescription and their translation into English.
5. Posology: Calculation of dosage for infants, children adults and elderly persons. Alcohol dilutions, Proof spirit, Isotonic solutions, Displacement value
6. Brief outline of communicable diseases, their causative agents, modes of transmission and their prevention
7. First Aid: Emergency treatment of shock, snake-bites, burns, poisoning and fractures.
8. Classification of microbes their structure and identification. Bacterial growth, nutritional requirements and staining.
9. Contamination of pharmaceuticals in hospital and community environments by microbes.
10. Sterilization: Definition, types, procedure and testing.
11. Sterilization of materials, equipments and utencils used in hospitals, centralized and decentralised sterilization. Drug distribution system in hospitals for out-patients and inpatients.
12. Opthalmic preparations: formulations, methods of preparation, containers and evaluation.
13. Collection, processing, storage and evaluation of blood, blood products and plasma – substitutes
14. Surgical products: Surgical cotton, surgical guazes, bandages, sutures, ligatures and catguts.
15. Definition and types of incompatibilities (Physical Chemical and Therapeutic), correction of incompatibilities.
16. Anatomy and physiology of Cardio-vascular system and related common disorders like hypertension, hypotension, angina, myocardial infarction and congestive heart failure.
17. Anatomy and physiology of Digestive system and related disorders like peptic ulcers, constipation, diarrhoea and jaundice.
18. Functions of different parts of Brain and spinal cord, Neuohumoral transmission in the central nervous system and autonomic nervous system.
19. Drugs, acting on cardiovascular system: Digitalis and other cardiac glycosides, antihypertensive drugs, anti-anginal and vasodilators including calcium channel antagonists.
20. Drugs acting on Gastro-intestinal tract: antacids, anti-ulcer drugs, anti-emetics, laxatives and anti diarrhoeal drugs.
21. Drugs acting on central nervous systems: Sadatives, hypnotics, anti-anxiety agents, centrally acting muscle relaxants, anti-epileptics, analgesic, anti-phyretic and antiinflammatory drugs.
22. Antigens, anti-bodies, antigen-anti body reactions, hypersensitivity active and passive immunity types of vaccines.
23. Historical development of antibiotics. Isolation of fermentation products with special reference to pencillins and tetracyclines.
24. Carbohydrate metabolism: Glycolysis, glucogenesis, glucogenolysis, glycogen formation, pentose phosphate pathway, uronic acid pathway, abnormalities of carbohydrate metabolism.
25. Introduction and principles of anti-microbial therapy Cotrimoxazole, fluorauinelones, newer pencillins, broad spectrum antibiotics, cephalosporins, macrolides, anti-tubercular, antileprotic, antifungal and anti-viral drugs.
26. Anti protozoan and anthelmintic drugs. Chemitheraphy of neoplastic diseases.
27. Salient features of Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 and Rules, 1945 with special reference to Duties and powers of Inspectors. Composition and functions of statutory bodies.
28. Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic substances Act, 1985 with special reference to procurement and utilization of dosage forms.