A comparison study between the Hemorrhage-Arresting Lever-Operated (HALO) tourniquet and the Combat Action Tourniquet (CAT) for the management of exsanguinating extremity hemorrhage.

Q3 Medicine
Ginny R Kaplan, Kevin T Collopy, William F Powers, Katerina Distler, Jerome C Munna, Michael W Hubble
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Tourniquets have been demonstrated to reduce preventable deaths due to exsanguination. However, studies have suggested that the Combat Action Tourniquet (CAT®), a popular prehospital device, may have a 19-30 percent failure rate, thus prompting the creation of a new, lever-operated device for exsanguinating extremity hemorrhage. However, the efficacy of this device compared to the CAT has not been reported.

Objective: To determine efficacy and ease of use of the Hemorrhage Arresting Lever Operated (HALO®) tourniquet compared to the CAT.

Methods: This was a prospective crossover observational study where an arterial hemorrhage was created on the right anterior, medial calf of a softly embalmed middle-aged female cadaver. A Kamoer UIP-CK15 continuous high-precision peristaltic pump was sutured to the femoral artery that measured the efflux of simulated bleeding. Participants were given manufacturer instructions for each tourniquet, randomized regarding which device to apply first, and queried about perceived ease of use and preference. All tourniquet applications were timed. Chi-square, McNemar test, t-test, and analysis of variance were used to compare groups. Factors significant in the univariate analysis were used to construct multivariate models of tourniquet success for each device type.

Results: Altogether, 135 participants were enrolled in the study, including 75 (55.5 percent) females, 13 (9.6 percent) ethnic minorities, 51 (37.7 percent) paramedics, 19 (14.1 percent) nurses, and 24 (17.7 percent) with prior military service. A total of 43 (31.8 percent) participants were able to achieve hemorrhage cessation with the HALO but not the CAT, compared with 6 (4.4 percent) of the participants who were able to achieve hemorrhage cessation with the CAT but not the HALO (p < .001). For participants who found the lever of the HALO easy to use, successful application of the HALO was 12.3 times more likely (odds ratio [OR] = 12.3; 95 percent confidence interval [CI]: 1.47-103.05). For those clinicians who applied the HALO properly compared with those who did not, hemorrhage cessation was 34.89 times more likely (OR = 34.89; 95 percent CI: 2.12-575.60). In contrast, there were no statistically significant predictors found for successful CAT -application.

Conclusions: With minimal practice, results suggest that the HALO tourniquet may be as effective and easier to use than the CAT tourniquet in the presence of exsanguinating lower extremity hemorrhage. Additional research is required for alternate locations and patient types.

止血杠杆式止血带(HALO)与战斗动作式止血带(CAT)治疗下肢出血的比较研究。
导言:止血带已被证明可以减少因失血而导致的可预防的死亡。然而,研究表明,战斗行动止血带(CAT®),一种流行的院前设备,可能有19- 30%的失败率,因此促使创造一种新的,杠杆操作的设备,用于四肢出血。然而,与CAT相比,该装置的疗效尚未见报道。目的:比较止血杠杆式(HALO®)止血带与CAT止血带的疗效和易用性。方法:这是一项前瞻性交叉观察研究,在一具经软防腐处理的中年女性尸体的右前内侧小腿上产生动脉出血。将Kamoer UIP-CK15型连续高精度蠕动泵缝合于股动脉,测量模拟出血的流出量。参与者被告知每种止血带的制造商说明,随机选择首先使用哪种设备,并询问其使用的易用性和偏好。所有止血带的应用都是定时的。采用卡方检验、McNemar检验、t检验和方差分析进行组间比较。采用单因素分析中具有显著意义的因素来构建各种设备类型止血带成功的多因素模型。结果:共有135名参与者参加了这项研究,其中75名(55.5%)女性,13名(9.6%)少数民族,51名(37.7%)护理人员,19名(14.1%)护士,24名(17.7%)有过服役经历。共有43名(31.8%)参与者能够通过HALO而不是CAT实现出血停止,相比之下,6名(4.4%)参与者能够通过CAT而不是HALO实现出血停止(p < 0.001)。对于发现HALO杠杆易于使用的参与者,成功应用HALO的可能性是12.3倍(优势比[OR] = 12.3;95%置信区间[CI]: 1.47-103.05)。对于那些正确使用HALO的临床医生来说,出血停止的可能性是未使用HALO的临床医生的34.89倍(OR = 34.89;95% CI: 2.12-575.60)。相比之下,没有发现有统计学意义的预测因素成功应用CAT。结论:经过少量的实践,结果表明HALO止血带可能与CAT止血带在下肢出血时一样有效且更容易使用。需要对其他地点和患者类型进行进一步的研究。
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来源期刊
American journal of disaster medicine
American journal of disaster medicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: With the publication of the American Journal of Disaster Medicine, for the first time, comes real guidance in this new medical specialty from the country"s foremost experts in areas most physicians and medical professionals have never seen…a deadly cocktail of catastrophic events like blast wounds and post explosion injuries, biological weapons contamination and mass physical and psychological trauma that comes in the wake of natural disasters and disease outbreak. The journal has one goal: to provide physicians and medical professionals the essential informational tools they need as they seek to combine emergency medical and trauma skills with crisis management and new forms of triage.
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