An ideal therapeutic for traumatic brain injury (TBI) accompanied by hemorrhagic shock (HS) should serve both as a resuscitation fluid to restore perfusion pressure while directly protecting the brain from secondary injury. Previous work in mice demonstrated that SanFlow is more effective than crystalloid or whole blood in restoring arterial pressure after TBI+HS and reduces neurodegeneration in the hippocampus. In Phase I, we found that resuscitation with SanFlow was superior to electrolytes in restoring arterial pressure and preserving hippocampal viable neurons in a guinea pig model of TBI+HS. In Phase II, we will evaluate the efficacy of SanFlow in a pig model, a large animal with a gyrencephalic brain. The first objective is to manufacture 30 L of SanFlow. The second objective is to evaluate three doses of SanFlow during resuscitation from TBI+HS on 4-day outcome of neuroinflammation, blood-brain barrier permeability, subacute neurodegeneration, and axonal injury. Using the optimal dose of SanFlow, the third objective is ascertain stable protection of neurons and axons over 15 days of recovery. These studies will inform whether SanFlow is capable of mitigating secondary brain injury over a 4-day period, and whether this treatment provides long-term neuroprotection rather than simply delaying neurodegeneration.