Management of Junctional Hemorrhage in Tactical Combat Casualty Care: TCCC Guidelines-Proposed Change 13-03

The vast majority of combat casualties who die from their injuries do so prior to reaching a medical treatment facility. Although most of these deaths result from nonsurvivable injuries, efforts to mitigate combat deaths can still be directed toward primary prevention through modification of techniq...

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Hauptverfasser: Kotwal, Russ S, Butler, Frank K, Gross, Kirby R, Kragh, Jr, John F, Kheirabadi, Bijan S, Baer, David G, Dubick, Michael A, Rasmussen, Todd E, Weber, Michael A, Bailey, Jeffrey A
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creator Kotwal, Russ S
Butler, Frank K
Gross, Kirby R
Kragh, Jr, John F
Kheirabadi, Bijan S
Baer, David G
Dubick, Michael A
Rasmussen, Todd E
Weber, Michael A
Bailey, Jeffrey A
description The vast majority of combat casualties who die from their injuries do so prior to reaching a medical treatment facility. Although most of these deaths result from nonsurvivable injuries, efforts to mitigate combat deaths can still be directed toward primary prevention through modification of techniques, tactics, and procedures and secondary prevention through improvement and use of personal protective equipment. For deaths that result from potentially survivable injuries, mitigation efforts should be directed toward primary and secondary prevention as well as tertiary prevention through medical care with an emphasis toward prehospital care as dictated by the fact that the preponderance of casualties die in the prehospital environment. Since the majority of casualties with potentially survivable injuries died from hemorrhage, priority must be placed on interventions, procedures, and training that mitigate death from truncal, junctional, and extremity exsanguination. In response to this need, multiple novel and effective junctional tourniquets have recently been developed. Published in the Journal of Special Operations Medicine, v13 n4 p85-93, Winter 2013.
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Although most of these deaths result from nonsurvivable injuries, efforts to mitigate combat deaths can still be directed toward primary prevention through modification of techniques, tactics, and procedures and secondary prevention through improvement and use of personal protective equipment. For deaths that result from potentially survivable injuries, mitigation efforts should be directed toward primary and secondary prevention as well as tertiary prevention through medical care with an emphasis toward prehospital care as dictated by the fact that the preponderance of casualties die in the prehospital environment. Since the majority of casualties with potentially survivable injuries died from hemorrhage, priority must be placed on interventions, procedures, and training that mitigate death from truncal, junctional, and extremity exsanguination. In response to this need, multiple novel and effective junctional tourniquets have recently been developed. 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source DTIC Technical Reports
subjects AAT(ABDOMINAL AORTIC TOURNIQUET)
CLAMPS
CROC(COMBAT READY CLAMP)
HEMORRHAGE
JETT(JUNCTIONAL EMERGENCY TREATMENT TOOL)
JUNCTIONAL HEMORRHAGE
JUNCTIONAL TOURNIQUETS
Medical Facilities, Equipment and Supplies
MEDICAL SUPPLIES
Medicine and Medical Research
MILITARY MEDICINE
SAM JUNCTIONAL TOURNIQUET
TCCC GUIDELINES
TCCC(TACTICAL COMBAT CASUALTY CARE)
TEST AND EVALUATION
WOUNDS AND INJURIES
title Management of Junctional Hemorrhage in Tactical Combat Casualty Care: TCCC Guidelines-Proposed Change 13-03
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