战医交界处止血带训练的结果:一项前瞻性、单盲、随机、交叉研究。

Şahin Kaymak, Aytekin Ünlü, Rahman Şenocak, Bilgi Karakaş, Gokhan Arslan, Mehmet Eryılmaz, Nazif Zeybek, Ali İhsan Uzar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:无论是在军事还是民用院前创伤环境中,出血仍是可能导致可预防死亡的主要原因。如果髂动脉或股总动脉受伤,传统的四肢止血带无法控制出血。止住交界处出血尤其具有挑战性,需要使用专门设计的交界处止血带。SAM® 交界止血带(SJT®,美国)和战术腹部交界止血带(T-AJT®,Fora Group Türkiye)已被土耳其安全部队积极使用。本研究探讨了培训对战斗医护人员成功使用交界止血带和使用时间(AT)的影响:我们对两种不同的交界止血带模型进行了前瞻性随机、交叉、单盲研究。参加研究的 40 人都是参加过为期 12 周的战地救护培训课程的学员,并获得了最新的医疗许可,这也是研究的资格标准。随机化是通过抽取 T-AJT®-SJT 卡进行的。研究包括训练前和训练后使用止血带两个阶段。在每个研究阶段,记录每组所有参与者的动脉血流量和有无动脉血流。最后,向作战医护人员发放了一份包含 6 个问题的调查问卷:结果:尽管培训提高了 T-AJT® 的成功使用率,但从统计学角度来看,培训与任何类型止血带的成功使用率都没有显著关系(P>0.05)。SJT® 和 T-AJT® 在训练前阶段的 ATs 分别为 55±11.8 秒和 93.8±2.9 秒,两者在统计学上有明显差异(p 结论:我们的研究主要探讨了 SJT® 和 T-AJT® 对止血带使用成功率的影响:我们的研究主要探讨了训练对有效使用止血带的影响。遗憾的是,与其他研究相比,我们的训练后成功率仍不尽如人意。这也是第一项关于 T-AJT® 止血带应用的研究,还需要进一步研究其有效性。
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Results of combat medic junctional tourniquet training: a prospective, single-blind, randomized, cross-over study.

Background: Bleeding remains the leading cause of potentially preventable deaths both in military and civilian pre-hospital trauma settings. Conventional extremity tourniquets do not control bleeding if an iliac artery or a common femoral artery is injured. Stopping junctional bleeding is particularly challenging and requires the use of specifically designed junctional tourniquets. SAM® Junctional Tourniquet (SJT®, United States of America) and Tactical Abdominal Junctional Tourniquet (T-AJT®, Fora Group Türkiye) have been actively used by Turkish security forces. This study questioned the effect of training on combat medics' successful junctional tourniquet applications and application times (AT).

Methods: Our research on two different junctional tourniquet models was designed as a prospective randomized, crossover, single-blinded study. All 40 participants in the study were attendees of a 12-week combat medic training course with updated medical approvals, which were used as an eligibility criterion. Randomization was performed by drawing T-AJT®-SJT cards. The study consisted of pretraining and after-training tourniquet application phases. In each study phase, all participants' AT and the presence or absence of arterial flow were recorded for each group. Finally, the combat medics were presented with a 6-question survey.

Results: Although training increased successful T-AJT® application rates, training was not statistically significantly associated with successful applications for any tourniquet types (p>0.05). The pretraining phase ATs for SJT® and T-AJT® were 55±11.8 and 93.8±2.9 seconds, respectively, and the difference was statistically significantly different (p<0.001). Likewise, after-training phase ATs for SJT® and T-AJT® were 49±22.6 and 79.2±17.5 seconds, respectively, and participants' SJT® ATs were significantly shorter (p<0.001). Overall, when participants' applied any of the tourniquet unsuccessfully, the odds of participants' lower Visual Analogue Scale scores were 0.2 (95% CI [0.08, 0.49]. p<0.001).

Conclusion: Our study basically investigates the effects of training on effective tourniquet application. Unfortunately, our after-training success rates remained unsatisfactory when compared to other studies. This is also the first study on T-AJT® tourniquet application, and further studies on its efficacy are also required.

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