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first aid


Note: Wikipedia does not give medical advice. If you or someone else needs medical assistance, seek expert help.

A tourniquet is a tightly tied band applied around a body part (an arm or a leg) in an attempt to stop severe traumatic bleeding or uncontrolled hemorrhage. Severe bleeding means the loss of more than 1,000 ml (1 liter) of blood. This flow of blood can soak a paper or cloth hankerchief in a few seconds. In such a situation, the bleeding will cause the death of the casualty in seconds to minutes.

Other methods that should be applied first and in conjunction, if possible, include:

Even in cases of amputation, most bleeding can be controlled through these alternative methods. The rare exception is when a limb is shattered by massive trauma or a major blood vessel is torn along its length. Even in these cases, the use of a pressure point above the wound (i.e. distal to the wound), or by a doctor of an hemostat, to clamp the blood vessel above the tear is strongly preferred.

The use of tourniquets is taught to emergency medical technicians including combat lifesavers, and as a part of military first aid in basic training. It is also part of the French basic first aid courses (for bystanders).

A tourniquet is a last resort method of bleeding control.

1 Risks of a tourniquet

As the tourniquet stops the perfusion of the limb, the resulting anoxia can cause the death of the limb, forcing the later surgical amputation of the limb just below the level the tourniquet is applied. This is likely to occur when the tourniquet stays in place several hours. In any event, once a tourniquet has been applied, advanced medical care from a doctor or hospital will be required to salvage the limb if not save the life of the patient.

The status of the tourniquet varies widely according to the country. This situation can be illustrated by the opposite philosophies applied in the United States and in France.

In any case, the first aider/rescue should act according to the local conditions (laws, rescue organisation and philosophy).

1.1 In the United States

The decision to employ a tourniquet should be made by a paramedic or preferably a doctor if at all possible. But when severe external bleeding cannot be controlled by other means, a tourniquet may be the only way for a first-aider to save the casualty. (A medical professional would use a hemostat or resort to field surgery.)

The first aid instruction no longer teaches the use of the tourniquet for the following reasons:

The use of a tourniquet by a layperson in countries where it is considered outside the scope of practice of first aid may result in civil lawsuits and/or criminal charges, especially if the application was later found to have been unnecessary.



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