Technique of Axillary Use of a Combat Ready Clamp to Stop Junctional Bleeding

Abstract

Junctional body regions are too proximal for a regular limb tourniquet to fit and include the groin and axillary areas [1,2]. Recently, we described a technique of the use of the Combat Ready Clamp (Combat Medical Systems, Fayetteville, NC) in prehospital hemorrhage control and a cadaver model used in its regulatory approval, but such uses were only in the groin [3-5]. Uncontrolled upper extremity hemorrhage in war is common, disabling, and lethal; recently, we counted 833 US military casualties hospitalized with a junctional wound coded during the current wars. Of the 151 casualties with an upper extremity injury amenable to a Combat Ready Clamp in axillary use, 16.6% died of wounds (25/151; Kragh et al, unpublished data). To show users how to apply a Combat Ready Clamp to stop axillary bleeding, we illustrate its technique of use. To help users understand the device's efficacy, we report data used in its regulatory application. To test efficacy, we used Wake Forest University Medical Center's cadaver hemorrhage control model; but instead of groin bleeding, we modeled axillary bleeding in a protocol approved by the Wake Forest institutional review board [4]. After the donor bequeathed the body under ethical oversight of the School of Medicine, a male cadaver was used (age, 75 years; weight, 150 lb). The body was refrigerated until used on May 18, 2012. The right subclavian artery was cannulated with pump tubing. Water simulated blood flow at 500 mL/min at 56 beats/min (Watson-Marlow pump model 603S issue 1; Bacon Technical Industries, Inc, Concord, MA). The axillary artery was isolated in the axilla, transected, and clamped with a hemostat in between iterations of Clamp use. The artery lumen bleeding was seen before, during, and after device use. Users target the underlying axillary artery in the deltopectoral groove (where soldiers nestle rifle butts when shooting) of the abducted arm (Fig. 1).

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2013
Accession Number
ADA614655

Entities

People

  • Craig K. Henkel
  • James E. Johnson
  • John Frederick Kragh
  • Michael A. Dubick

Organizations

  • United States Army Institute of Surgical Research

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Arteries
  • Blood Flow
  • Body Regions
  • Casualties
  • Data Acquisition
  • Department Of Defense
  • Electronic Mail
  • Emergency Medicine
  • Engineering
  • First Responders
  • Governments
  • Hemorrhage
  • Medical Personnel
  • Tissue Engineering
  • Universities
  • Upper Extremity

Fields of Study

  • Medicine

Readers

  • Trauma Surgery or Emergency Medicine.
  • Trauma or Military Medicine