policemedic
Verified SWAT
What's the best way you've found to practice packing? What simulators, tools, or other adjuncts have you found to be useful?
What's the best way you've found to practice packing? What simulators, tools, or other adjuncts have you found to be useful?
We've used the biggest beef roast we could find at the store.
How can you pack an abdominal wound? Where is the bleeding coming from? You could put a ton of gauze and kerlix in and never touch the bleed. I'm just a 68W but I've never been taught anything but contain an abdominal wound.
Clamp or ligate (remembering the leave the tails hanging way outside the wound edges after closing) the bleeeder(s); cut to fit and utilize the plastic backing from a HALO chest SEAL dressing as a backing inside the wound and use the HALO to close the wound or staple it closed (pending your SOPs.)
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I am curious about ya'lls professional opinion on this - http://www.shadowspear.com/special-operations-medicine/106233-darpa-wound-statis-system.html
It seems like an amazing breakthrough for combat trauma if it works correctly. Although to my extremely untrained eye it seems as though the foam could wrap around organs. Any thoughts? *Back to lurking*
Clamp or ligate (remembering the leave the tails hanging way outside the wound edges after closing) the bleeeder(s); cut to fit and utilize the plastic backing from a HALO chest SEAL dressing as a backing inside the wound and use the HALO to close the wound or staple it closed (pending your SOPs.)
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Surgicalcric...
Wouldn't your description be most useful for a 'wall bleed', rather than an internal organ perf? Yes, damage control surgery goes much like you state, but the packing is done around the bleeding organ, not just the cavitary entrance.
That wound stasis looks good. Quick perusal of the stated ingredients remind me of that "Great Stuff" insulating foam.
Better be ready to control the airway and monitor ventilation: the diaphragm may have a hard time moving against the foam mass.
Wonder if it's flammable?