Where trauma is survived, a silent killer lurks

Our technology restores the immune system when every minute counts.

Immune balance as the key to survival

Innovative immunotherapy for trauma and ICU patients
In cases of severe trauma, the immune system initially responds strongly, but then becomes exhausted. This so-called immunoparalysis makes patients extra vulnerable to dangerous infections such as sepsis and pneumonia, which are often more deadly than the original injury. Restoring immune balance is therefore essential for survival after severe trauma.

We develop therapies that reactivate the immune system.

Why immunoparalysis is so dangerous

Severe trauma initially causes a strong inflammatory response. This exhausts the innate immune system, suddenly making common hospital bacteria life-threatening.
Restoring the immune balance is then literally a matter of life and death.

For trauma and ICU patients — civilian and military

Immunoparalysis is common after burns, sepsis, crush injuries, and major surgery.
In military situations, the risk is even greater: more survivors of explosions and complex injuries, followed by long stays in intensive care—precisely the conditions in which immunoparalysis strikes.

Combating AMR: the power of our natural defenses

The innate immune system also plays a crucial role in the fight against microorganisms, including those with antimicrobial resistance (AMR), by providing a first line of defense that is immediate and broadly effective.

The effectiveness of this system is generally not affected by the specific resistance mechanisms that bacteria develop against antibiotics.

Trauma is unpredictable. Immunoparalysis should not be.

Immune recovery when every minute counts

Reactivation of immune cells to prevent secondary infections.

Targeted immunomodulation, not suppression

Restoring balance to an exhausted immune system after serious injury or major surgery.

Designed for both civilian and military use

Connection with the reality of complex injuries and long ICU stays.

Science-based

From laboratory to clinic with a clear, step-by-step development path.