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What is the Lozacote Bandage?
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What is it?
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How does it work?
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How is it made?
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The body clots blood using fibrinogen,
thrombin, calcium and vitamin K. It produces small amounts of these substances itself. When combined these substances form thin strands of fibrin and create the mesh that the platelets cling to so that the blood will clot. By putting |
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more of these substances into a wound the Lozacote Bandage
stops bleeding in seconds. |
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Click on picture to enlarge it and
see how the Lozacote bandage adheres itself to a wound. |
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Thrombin and fibrinogen are
extracted from the plasma of pigs and cows. First, "perfect subjects" are created that produce high amounts of the clotting proteins - fibrinogen and thrombin. Then the "perfect" pigs and cows are cloned at Cloning Farms (at right) which are huge farms built especially for the cloning of the pigs and cows. |
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These huge farms are owned by bandage manu-
facturers and are located next to bandage manufac- turing plants. |
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Self-
Adhering |
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Daily Uses?
(graphic) |
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Microchip
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Self-
Cleaning |
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Internal Use
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Self-
Medicating |
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Red blood cells
clinging to fibrin mesh |
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Click on the buttons below to HEAR about the Lozacote Bandage.
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To read about one patient's experience with the Lozacote
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What are some
of its |
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Bandage, click on the picture at left.
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