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The case against tourniquets
Bjorn, Pret pbjorn at emh.orgMon Dec 11 13:25:46 GMT 2006
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Karim, Of course you're correct. This is a milieu-specific intervention, not unlike adult intraosseous access. On the battlefield -- especially in a theater where the weapon of choice is the roadside mine -- a pocketful of tourniquets makes all kinds of sense: victims outnumber rescuers, mangled extremities outnumber victims, the scene is hostile, and the prehospital system is the most mobile and sophisticated ever constructed by man. In these unique circumstances, tourniquets aren't merely a means of treating a wound; they're one element of a swift and systematic evacuation from hell to hospital, unparalleled in other civilian EMS. As much as we're learning from our experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan, it's important to keep our lessons in context. Most trauma providers of the world get their uncontrolled extremity hemorrhages one by one, in comparatively placid environs. And most of us work in systems where tourniquets risk staying cinched for regrettable lengths of time. It's alarming that I've received two separate product flyers for prehospital tourniquets in the past month. We've got to stop this insanity. Pret Bjorn, RN Bangor, ME USA -----Original Message----- From: trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org [mailto:trauma-list-bounces at trauma.org] On Behalf Of Karim Brohi Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2006 8:55 AM 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
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