| Literature DB >> 27623805 |
S E van Oostendorp1, E C T H Tan2,3, L M G Geeraedts4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Exsanguination following trauma is potentially preventable. Extremity tourniquets have been successfully implemented in military and civilian prehospital care. Prehospital control of bleeding from the torso and junctional area's remains challenging but offers a great potential to improve survival rates. This review aims to provide an overview of potential treatment options in both clinical as preclinical state of research on truncal and junctional bleeding. Since many options have been developed for application in the military primarily, translation to the civilian situation is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Bleeding; Exsanguination; Haemorrhage; Intervention; Junctional; Prehospital; Trauma; Truncal
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27623805 PMCID: PMC5022193 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0301-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Fig. 1CRoC™. Https://combatmedicalsystems.wordpress.com/2013/05/06/combat-ready-clamp-croctm-makes-tactical-medicine-history/
Fig. 2iTClamp™. Image provided by manufacturer
Overview of retrieved studies covering the identified prehospital treatment options, ordered by anatomical site, device and stage of (pre-clinical) research
| Site | Device | Clinical | Preclinical | Physician required? | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prehospital civilian | Prehospital military | Inhospital | Volunteer | Cadaver/manikin | Animal | |||
| Axilla | CRoC | - | - | - | - | [ | - | No |
| JETT | - | - | - | - | - | - | No | |
| SAM-JT | - | - | - | - | - | - | No | |
| AAJT | [ | - | - | [ | - | - | No | |
| iTClamp | - | - | - | - | - | - | No | |
| Xstat-30 | - | - | - | - | - | [ | No | |
| Groin | CRoC | - | [ | - | [ | [ | [ | No |
| JETT | - | - | - | [ | [ | - | No | |
| SAM-JT | - | [ | - | [ | [ | - | No | |
| AAJT-Groin | - | [ | - | [ | - | - | No | |
| AAJT-Truncal | - | [ | - | [ | [ | No | ||
| iTClamp | [ | [ | - | - | [ | [ | No | |
| Xstat-30 | - | - | - | - | - | [ | No | |
| REBOA | - | - | [ | - | - | [ | Yes | |
| Abdominal | REBOA | - | - | [ | - | - | [ | Yes |
| Resuscitative thoracotomy | [ | - | [ | - | - | - | Yes | |
| Insufflation | - | - | - | - | - | [ | No | |
| ResQFoam | - | - | - | - | [ | [ | No | |
| Thorax | Resuscitative thoracotomy | [ | - | [ | - | - | - | Yes |
| REBOA | - | - | - | - | - | - | Yes | |
| Pelvis | Sheet | - | - | [ | - | [ | - | No |
| AAJT-Truncal | - | - | - | [ | - | - | No | |
| TPOD | - | - | [ | [ | [ | - | No | |
| SAM-Sling | - | - | [ | [ | [ | - | No | |
| Pelvic Binder | - | - | [ | [ | [ | - | No | |
| Resuscitative thoracotomy | [ | - | [ | - | - | [ | Yes | |
| REBOA | [ | - | [ | - | - | [ | Yes | |
Fig. 3AAJT™. Image provided by manufacturer
Fig. 4JETT™. Image provided by manufacturer
Fig. 5SAM-JT™. Image provided by manufacturer
List of identified prehospital treatment options
| Class | Adjunct | Name | Manufacturier | Pro’s | Con’s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junctional tourniquets | CRoC™ | Combat Ready Clamp™ | Combat medical systems. Fayetteville, NC | Easy. 4 h max | Dislodgement, heavy, limb ischemia, longer application time than other JT’s |
| JETT™ | Juntional Emergency Tourniquet Tool™ | North American Rescue Products. Greer, SC | Easy. 4 h max. Stabilizes pelvis | No reports of clinical use | |
| SAM-JT™ | SAM Junctional Tourniquet™ | SAM Medical Products. Wilsonville, OR | Easy. 4 h max. Stabilizes pelvis | Little experience | |
| AAJT™ | Abdominal Aortic and Junctional Tourniqet™ | Compression Works. Hoover, AL | Axillary, inguinal and truncal application. External compression of the abdominal aorta | Easily broken. Uncomfortable in truncal application. Truncal max 1 h. In penetrating trauma CI for truncal placement | |
| Wound clamp | iTC™ | iTClamp™ | Innovative Trauma Care. San Antonio, TX | Very easy, any location | Only superficial seal, hematoma |
| Haemostatic agent | XStat-30™ | XStat-30™ | RevMedx. Wilsonville, OR | Easy, tailored for deep penetrating wounds | Only junctional, removal of sponges |
| REBOA | 9-14 Fr | Coda™ Balloon Catheter | Cook Medical, Indianapolis, IN | Proximal control, raises central aortic pressure | Invasive, requires physician, risk at (spinal) ischemia, challenging, time consuming |
| 7 Fr | ER-REBOA™ | Pryor Medical. Arvada, CO | |||
| Intra-abdominal gas insufflation | - | - | - | Minor invasive. Less risk at pressure necrosis than foam. | Abdominal compartment syndrome, risk of air embolisms, experimental |
| Intra-abdominal self-expanding foam | ResQFoam™ | ResQFoam™ | Arsenal Medical. Waterland, MA | Tamponade of abdominal compartment, less invasive then RT/REBOA, no physician required | Pressure necrosis, abdominal compartment syndrome, needs surgical removal, experimental |
| Pelvic stabilizer | T-POD™ | Trauma Pelvic Orthotic Device™ | Pyng Medical. Richmond, Canada | Easy applicable, wide experience, enables REBOA/AAJT | Insufficient if origin of haemorrhage is arterial |
| SAM-sling™ | SAM-sling™ | SAM Medical Products. Wilsonville, OR | |||
| PelvicBinder™ | PelvicBinder™ | PelvicBinder Inc. Dallas, TX | |||
| Pelvic Sheet | - | - | - | Low cost, widely available | Inadequate application, dislodgement |
| Resuscitative Thoracotomy | - | - | - | Very proximal control, raises central aortic pressure. | Invasive, risk at infection, requires physician |