Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
The case against tourniquets
Thomas Anthony Horan thoran at sarah.brSun Dec 10 14:07:40 GMT 2006
- Previous message: The case against tourniquets
- Next message: The case against tourniquets
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
karim, this is an excellent editorial, it needs to be published, will it be? Tom > ---------- > From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org[SMTP:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] on behalf of Karim Brohi[SMTP:karim at trauma.org] > Reply To: Trauma & Critical Care mailing list > Sent: domingo, 10 de dezembro de 2006 11:55 > To: trauma-list at trauma.org > Subject: The case against tourniquets > > Recently, the US and UK military have "rediscovered" tourniquets. Their use > has been published in meetings around the world and is now spreading to > civilian practice. ATLS and other groups have spent years campaigning to > remove tourniquets from civilian practice, for good reasons, and now they > are back - with not a shred of evidence to support this reversion. > > Maybe we need reminding of why tourniquets were abandoned in civilian > practice - so here's a case from a couple of weeks ago. A young man is > brought to another hospital after a multiple stabbing incident. Most are > superficial but he has arterial haemorrhage from a wound in the distal > medial thigh. A tourniquet is placed in the upper thigh and he is > transferred to us. On arrival he is taken straight to the operating room > for revascularisation but total time with the tourniquet is 2.5 hours. > > The popliteal artery injury is small and only requires direct suture repair. > However the distal limb shows signs of swelling and a 4-compartment lower > leg fasciotomy is performed. The patient is transferred to the ward but > despite the early fasciotomy has a large rise in his Creatine Kinase and > develops renal impairment. Further he has a complete foot drop from > ischemic injury which may or may not recover. > > The patient's haemorrhage would have been easily controllable by pressure > either at the site of injury or by digital pressure over the common femoral > artery at the femoral head. 2.5 hours is not a particularly long ischemic > time and there was no associated vein injury. Venous congestion, > fasciotomy, ischemia to calf and thigh misculature, ischemic nerve damage > and renal failure were all contributed to, or arguably entirely the result > of tourniquet use. > > The military operate under entirely different conditions. A second pair of > hands to provide manual pressure may not be available and hence a > self-applied tourniquet may indeed be life-saving. These are blast injuries > and often control haemorrhage from distal amputation. But they may well not > be limb saving - indeed the amputation rate is twice that of previous wars. > (Yes more lives are being saved and yes there is improved torso armour etc > etc). Further anecdotal UK experience suggests that soldiers are often > applying them with too little force and therefore causing venous obstruction > and increasing blood loss from the limb. Watching 3 marines walking down > the street in San Diego with one leg between them was sobering. > > And for all the talk of not having a second pair of hands, there is a wealth > of evidence from landmine victims that non-medical, in fact uneducated > villagers in remote, rural settings can control haemorrhage with digital > pressure and transport victims long distances for medical therapy (using > donkeys, not CCAT military transports) - and villagers can teach other > villagers to do it). The Tromsoe Mine Victim Resource Centre > (http://www.traumacare.no/) has been doing this in Cambodia, Afghanistan, > North Iraq, Burma and Afghanistan for years. Read what they have to say > about tourniquets and the cases and images of increased haemorrhage > following their use. > > To use a military term, we are suffering from severe mission creep as > tourniquets seep back into civilian practice. Their use was banned for a > reason, which we are in danger of forgetting - and relearning. The military > have their own reasons for using them, but we need to see real data about> > their effectiveness for limb salvage. For the military, tourniquet use > should be a last resort, in the knowledge that morbidity, disability and > amputation are increased with their use. They should not be advocated in > civilian practice at all. > > Karim > > -- > trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG > To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: > http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html >
- Previous message: The case against tourniquets
- Next message: The case against tourniquets
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
