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Clotting agents buy wounded troops life-saving time
Stars and Stripes ^ | Monday, April 14, 2003 | By David Allen

Posted on 04/13/2003 7:34:24 PM PDT by 11th_VA

U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf were sent into battle with medical innovations that are proving their promise to cut the number of battlefield deaths due to excessive bleeding.

They’ve been designed to control bleeding by speeding up the clotting process. The most successful so far, according to preliminary battlefield reports, is a powder called QuikClot that one day will be standard Marine Corps issue for every individual first- aid kit.

QuikClot is a granular substance similar to a clay powder that can be poured directly onto a wound, almost instantly forming a clot and stopping bleeding. It works by sucking the water molecules out of blood, accelerating the natural clotting factors.

The other new method involves two kinds of bandages that also cause blood to quickly coagulate. One, produced by HemCon Inc. of Portland, Ore., stops arterial bleeding within a minute when applied with pressure on a wound. It’s made of chitosan, an extract of shrimp shells, and costs about $90 per bandage.

HemCon’s bandage was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in November, and the Army ordered 26,000, according to the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research in San Antonio. A couple thousand have already made it to the troops in Iraq, and preliminary reports show they have performed well.

Another bandage, being developed by the American Red Cross, is made of clotting proteins extracted from human blood. At a $1,000 each, use has been limited so far.

QuikClot, the Marine Corps’ coagulant of choice, has been used extensively.

Marines are adding the powder, priced at $20 for a 3½-ounce packet, to first-aid kits for troops bound for the Gulf. The substance is designed to help wounded soldiers control bleeding until they can be reached and treated by medics.

“QuikClot is the only FDA product that has repeatedly been shown to be effective,” said Rear Admiral R.D. Hufstader, medical officer of the Marine Corps.

Studies have shown that excessive bleeding causes have of all battlefield deaths.

“We have anecdotal evidence that QuikClot has been extremely successful in the field,” said Jenny Holbert, public affairs director for the Marine Corps War- fighting Laboratory in Quantico, Va., which tested the substance before approving its distribution in first-aid kits in the Gulf.

“We sent 15,000 packets in enhanced first-aid kits to the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force,” she said. “We don’t have any official reports yet, but from all we are hearing it’s been very successful.

“We’re not expecting to get any formal feedback on how well it performed until things slow down.”

Tests on animals showed that QuikClot turned wounds that once were 100 percent fatal into wounds that were 100 percent nonfatal, according to the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences at Bethesda, Md.

Bart Gullong, vice president of Z-Medica, the small Connecticut company that makes QuikClot, said he has received reports from the battlefield that his company’s product was performing well.

“We have received confirmed reports from Iraq of multiple uses of QuikClot on the battlefield with multiple lives saved and no adverse effects,” Gullong said from his firm’s Newington, Conn., headquarters. “This is the first significant use of our product on the battlefield, and it is performing as expected.”

Gullong said he was excited by the reports.

“This is the real deal, absolutely the real deal,” he said. “It’s just great news. This is what we’ve been working towards. We’ve already delivered thousands of units to the military, and we’re still getting orders every day.”

He said the company received FDA approval last May and immediately began manufacturing the QuikClot kits for the military.

“We started with the understanding that the conflict was coming, and we wanted to be sure the troops were equipped with our product,” he said. “Now, we’re identifying distributors and marketing strategies for all first responders, such as police, firefighters and paramedics — anyone who is first on the scene of a severe bleeding injury.

“We also expect a consumer version for families to be ready for sale Aug. 1.”

He said a pack of five units would cost about $10.

Gullong said employees of the small company feel like they’re on a “mission.”

“About a year and a half ago, I went to see the movie ‘Black Hawk Down’ with my wife, just about the time we were beginning to concentrate on QuikClot,” he said. “And I don’t mean to get sappy, but when I saw the soldiers on the screen die because of loss of blood, well, that really did something for me.

“I walked out of the theater thinking that there are two times in my life when I really felt like I’d been put on this Earth for a purpose. Once was when my daughter was born. The other time was seeing that movie and knowing we could make a difference and save lives.

“This has not been as much a business for us as a mission.”


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: battlefield; battlefieldmedicine; coagulants; firstaid; health; iraq; marines; medic; medicine; miltech; pharmaceuticals; quikclot; wounded
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
'If you're bleeding internally (chest, abdomen, etc.) this stuff can't possibly help you'

They're working on an aerosol cersion that can be fed into a stab or puncture wound. It's just a manner of time.
21 posted on 04/13/2003 10:12:21 PM PDT by Bogey78O (check it out... http://freepers.zill.net/users/bogey78o_fr/puppet.swf)
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To: 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
'If you're bleeding internally (chest, abdomen, etc.) this stuff can't possibly help you'

They're working on an aerosol cersion that can be fed into a stab or puncture wound. It's just a manner of time.
22 posted on 04/13/2003 10:12:21 PM PDT by Bogey78O (check it out... http://freepers.zill.net/users/bogey78o_fr/puppet.swf)
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To: 11th_VA
Tests on animals showed that QuikClot turned wounds... nonfatal...

Whoopee! Animals no longer needed: finally a good use for ANTI AMERICAN LIBERAL WAR PROTESTORS =^)

23 posted on 04/13/2003 10:35:59 PM PDT by InkStone
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To: nutmeg; RaceBannon
CT Manufactured Bump!
24 posted on 04/13/2003 10:50:34 PM PDT by Fixit (http://comedian.blogspot.com)
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To: 11th_VA
Bump!

Great Article.

We don't ned the Red Crescent I mean Cross version though.
25 posted on 04/14/2003 12:31:06 AM PDT by Kay Soze (For every 100 Osamas created in the fight on terrorism - we shall simply elect one more "W")
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To: All
Man man man... I watched BlackHawk Down a couple weeks ago just after the war started. I went to bed that night thinking about the Ranger who bled to death... instantly I "invented" a field treatment to stop bleeding. I was quite excited to talk to someone about trying it out.

A few days after that, I saw a national Medical Reporter talking about new innovations for treating wounds on the battlefield. One of them was my invention, and it is this stuff!!!!! Can you believe that?? I invented this in 5 minutes one night... but I invented it about a year too late. :-(
26 posted on 04/14/2003 5:41:46 AM PDT by BagCamAddict
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To: whadizit
I believe the fat-binding product was chitosol, rather than chitosan.
27 posted on 04/14/2003 5:43:28 AM PDT by BagCamAddict
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To: Bogey78O
They're working on an aerosol version that can be fed into a stab or puncture wound.

My version of this invention CAN be inserted into bullet wounds, stab wounds, etc. Who should I contact about my idea?????? (Anyone want to invest on the ground floor?????)

28 posted on 04/14/2003 5:56:17 AM PDT by BagCamAddict
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To: Bogey78O
Ummm.... no. If you're shot through and through and bleeding from the aorta, vena cava and kidney, first of all any aerosol that you could spray into a gunshot wound would never physically reach those structures and second of all, if it could it would be like trying to seal a break in the hoover dam with super glue.
29 posted on 04/14/2003 6:11:27 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten
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To: 11th_VA
note to Professor van Helsing; dump the garlic clove bouquet. Sprinkle QuickClot on Mina's neck. Ol' Drac's choppers will get clogged faster than the pipes in the loo.

Jonathan
30 posted on 04/14/2003 8:44:09 AM PDT by cogitator
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To: Fixit
CT Manufactured Bump!

Thanks for the bump! Now that you mention it, I think I remember seeing something about this product in The Hartford Courant awhile ago.

31 posted on 04/14/2003 7:31:23 PM PDT by nutmeg (Liberate Iraq - Support Our Troops!)
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