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Battle Casualty Survival with Emergency Tourniquet Use to Stop Limb Bleeding
Authors:John F. Kragh Jr COL  MC  USA  Michelle L. Littrel CPT  AN  USA  John A. Jones  Thomas J. Walters PHD  David G. Baer PHD  Charles E. Wade PHD  John B. Holcomb MD
Affiliation:?US Army Institute of Surgical Research (USAISR), Fort Sam Houston, Texas;Department of Nursing, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas
Abstract:

Background

In a previous study conducted at a combat support hospital in Iraq, we reported the major lifesaving benefits of emergency tourniquets to stop bleeding in major limb trauma. Morbidity associated with tourniquet use was minor.

Study Objectives

The objective of this study is to further analyze emergency tourniquet use in combat casualty care.

Design and Setting

This report is a continuation of our previous study of tourniquet use in casualties admitted to a combat support hospital (NCT00517166 at www.ClinicalTrials.gov).

Methods

After verifying comparable methodologies for the first study and the current study, we compared patient results for these two time periods and then pooled data to analyze outcomes with a larger sample size.

Results

The total study population was 499 (232 in the previous study and 267 in the current study). In all, 862 tourniquets were applied on 651 limbs. Survival was 87% for both study periods. Morbidity rates for palsies at the level of the tourniquet were 1.7% for study 1 and 1.5% for study 2; major limb shortening was 0.4% for both. Survival was associated with prehospital application (89% vs. 78% hospital, p < 0.01) and application before the onset of shock (96% vs. 4% after).

Conclusions

This study shows consistent lifesaving benefits and low risk of emergency tourniquets to stop bleeding in major limb trauma.
Keywords:tourniquet   trauma   major   military   limb injury   hemorrhage control
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