Menstrual pads that turn blood solid could reduce the risk of leaks
Adding a polymer-alcohol mixture to menstrual pads causes blood to solidify, rather than being absorbed, which could ward off leaks
By Elizabeth Hlavinka
11 July 2024
Existing menstrual pads can lead to leaks
Vittoria/Alamy
Menstrual products that cause blood to form a solid gel-like substance, rather than be absorbed, seem to reduce the risk of leaks.
Bryan Hsu at Virginia Tech and his colleagues wanted to find a way of reducing the leaks that often occur with conventional menstrual pads and cups.
They tested various types of biopolymers, naturally occurring chain-like molecules, with pig blood to find one that increases its viscosity. The team used pig blood because it is easier to access than human menstrual blood but has similar properties, says Hsu.
Advertisement
Read more
A new understanding of how your blood type influences your health
A type of biopolymer called alginate was mixed with glycerol, a sort of alcohol, and then exposed to blood, which created a gel-like substance. “The alginate powder alone, when blood is added, doesn’t absorb the blood very well,” says Hsu. “It has kind of like an unstirred-cocoa-powder-in-milk consistency with a dry core. We added the glycerol to the alginate to improve its ability to absorb blood.”
To put the combination to the test, the researchers added 8 millilitres of blood to an artificial vagina, simulating a period. They made this bleed onto a standard menstrual pad where the internal absorptive material had been removed and replaced with gauze coated in the alginate-glycerol mixture. One hour later, this pad had retained more blood than when the vagina bled on standard pads that hadn’t been altered.