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Army fields new equipment to stop bleeding

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Army fields new equipment to stop bleeding



Test results show Combat Gauze field bandages and WoundStat granules both demonstrated marked improvements over what's currently used to control bleeding in the field, said Col. Paul Cordts of the Army Surgeon General's office.To get more news about hemostatic combat gauze, you can visit rusuntacmed.com official website.

"These products improve survival, result in less blood loss and improved post-injury blood pressures," he said about findings from the tests conducted by Army Medical Research and Materiel Command's Institute of Surgical Research.

Excessive blood loss is the number one killer on the battleground, said Cordts, a surgeon. Both products can stop bleeding quickly in wounds where tourniquets can't be used, he said.
About 270,000 12-foot strips of Combat Gauze are expected to be in theater by the end of the year, said Lt. Col. Sean Morgan from Program Executive Office-Soldier, the agency fielding most of the bandages. More than 17,000 packages of WoundStat also will be working their way to the field, he said.

Combat Gauze uses kaolin, a fine, white clay, to stop bleeding, Cordts said, and WoundStat granules react with blood to form a barrier, preventing more bleeding.

More than 92 percent of troops wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan survive their injuries in combat -- the highest percentage of any war. Master Sgt. Horace Tyson, a combat medic, said he attributes the high number of people being saved to the advanced tools the Army provides medics, such as dressings that stop or slow blood flow from wounds.

Having recently returned from a 15-month assignment in Iraq as the senior enlisted manager in a battalion aid station in the heart of Baghdad, Tyson said, he saw first-hand the benefits of dressings with blood-clotting capabilities.The bandages make the difference between a [Soldier] having no chance of living because he'll bleed out in five minutes versus me getting him to an aid station within 20 minutes and him staying alive," Tyson said. "Without the bandages, he could be dead."

With 19 years of experience and four deployments in conflict areas under his belt, Tyson said, he's seen the Army's scientific research drastically improve medics' tools and training.

"If we're going to get something else better for the battlefield, that's great," he said.

The new dressings are expected not only to save more lives, but also to bring significant cost savings to the government, Cordts said. Combat Gauze is less than $30 per dressing, compared to the currently used HemCon bandage, which

uses chitosan from shrimp shells to stop blood and costs $88 per bandage. WoundStat also is less expensive than the QuikClot granules it replaces.

The Army plans to equip combat lifesavers to carry three gauzes, and eventually all Soldiers will have one in their Improved First Aid Kits. Combat medics, who are highly trained in emergency trauma, will be given three gauzes, but will be the only ones to carry WoundStat, since it requires more medical expertise to use, Cordts
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