يحاول ذهب - حر
Artificial Skin From The Sea
August 16, 2017
|Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Kerecis has found a fishy way to battle the growing problem of chronic wounds and faltering healing factors
Six hours north of Reykjavik, along a narrow road tracing windswept fjords, is the Icelandic town of Isafjordur, home of 3,000 people and the midnight sun. On a blustery May afternoon, snow still fills the couloirs that loom over the docks, where the Pall Palsson, a 583-tonne trawler, has just returned from a three-day trip. Below the rust-spotted deck, neat boxes are packed with freshly caught fish and ice. “If you take all the skins from that trawler,” says Fertram Sigurjonsson, the chairman and chief executive officer of Kerecis Ltd., gesturing over the catch, “we would be able to treat one in five wounds in the world.”
Iceland has a long history of working with fish leather. “My grandfather’s first shoes were the skin of a catfish,” Sigurjonsson says. Instead of kilometres, Icelanders used to mark distance in worn out fish shoes. Sigurjonsson and his small company have spent the past nine years applying this tradition to the treatment of chronic wounds, those that take longer than a month to heal.
The materials in fish skin, particularly omega-3 fatty acids, yield natural anti- inflammatory effects that speed healing. When placed on wounds, the product, made from dried and processed fish skin, works as an extra cellular matrix, a group of proteins and starches that plays a crucial role in recovery. In a healthy person, a matrix surrounds cells and binds them to tissue, generating the growth of new epidermis. But in chronic wounds, this natural structure fails to form. So like a garden trellis, the fish skin provides the body’s own cells a structure to grow around so they can form healthy tissue, gradually becoming incorporated into the closing wound.
هذه القصة من طبعة August 16, 2017 من Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Golfing With The Enemy
Did Donald Trump's executives violate the Cuban embargo?
12 mins
August 16, 2016
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Super-Rich Syrians Wait for War's End
Actor, author, playwright. Gill Pringle tries her hand at unravelling the mystery behind this enigmatic multi-hyphenate
11 mins
July 01, 2016
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
How About A Bit More Room For Competition?
The tech giants may be contributing to the US economy’s most persistent ailments. Should they be broken up?
6 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Stand By ... Scanning For Viruses And Secrets
Kaspersky Lab has worked much more closely with Russian intelligence than it has disclosed
5 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Uber Without The Smartphone
With inspiration from a nonprofit in Atlanta, the app is becoming more senior-friendly
4 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Brands Pump Up The Volume In Pakistan
Foreign companies are sponsoring raves to reach young, affluent consumers
4 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Tim Cook CEO, Apple
The head of the most valuable company in the world talks to Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Megan Murphy about augmented reality, the new HomePod, Donald Trump, and the legacy of Steve Jobs
13 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Syrian Refugees: Western Union's Most Loyal Customers
Refugees, immigrants expatriates. For some politicians, they're scapegoats. For Western Union, they're customers
20 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
The Asian Jobs Ladder Is Broken
An economic model that’s organised an entire hemisphere for decades could be coming to an abrupt end.
5 mins
August 1, 2017
Bloomberg Businessweek Middle East
Iran's Islamic Evolution
Both conservatives and reformists consider the ballot box an essential instrument“There may be two candidates, but they are part of the system”
5 mins
June 16, 2017
Translate
Change font size
