Every time you inhale, oxygen passes from your windpipe to your lungs and on into your bloodstream. But what if your windpipe was (blocked)? Getting the gas straight to your blood could save your life. Wait, put down that syringe—a large air bubble in a blood vessel can kill you. But what if the bubbles were only a few (millionths) of a meter in diameter?
Researchers coated tiny amounts of oxygen gas with fatty molecules to create microparticles. Suspended in solution, the microparticles formed a foam containing 50 to 90 percent oxygen. In a beaker of blood, the foam was able to (quickly) transfer its oxygen to the cells.
Then the researchers tested it in animals. Normally, a blocked windpipe cuts off the blood’s supply of oxygen, leading to brain damage and death. But when rabbits with blocked windpipes received injections of the (microparticles), their blood oxygen levels and heart rates remained stable. The work is in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
The foam may someday buy time for human patients. So that even someone with a (closed) airway can breathe easy.