Results 26 to 50 of 101
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12-06-2021, 09:13 AM #26Registered User
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I felt the same way until I was on scene and help treat a brachial artery slice from ski edge last year. We had a review with the ER doc who treated and they agreed in a retrospective they gave that the Quickclot was a good addition to the packing of the wound. I carry a 4x4 of it now as cheap insurance. But yeah...when to use it matters.
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12-06-2021, 09:25 AM #27
yep i carry it specifically for brachial artery bleeds - like, that's the specific use case. happens pretty commonly as a ski injury (skis are sharp and it's easy to cut your brachial). it won't stop all bleeding but it sure helps, and it's a nice middle ground between a tourniquet and a standard 4x4" at no extra weight.
having seen an inbounds brachial bleed, i don't want to try to manage that in the backcountry - i want all the help i can get.
also +1 on the WFR recommendation. seems irresponsible not to tbh. WFA is a bare minimum in my opinion. you owe it to your partners.
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12-06-2021, 09:36 AM #28
Here in VT I focus on bleeding wounds (tight trees have pokey things) and then shock management - extra layers, emergency blanket/bivy, hand/foot warmers, etc.
My ziplock baggie also has gloves & sanitizer as PPE, additional Voile straps, and self adhesive compression wrap. A knife and/or scissors is also important.
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12-06-2021, 09:49 AM #29
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12-06-2021, 10:25 AM #30
Appreciate you folks updating my knowledge. I will add in some of those 4x4 quickclot bandages
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12-06-2021, 11:21 AM #31
more "side" country than "slack", ie not out of range
just enough to wait for assistance, not necessarily fix an injury or move the injured party
fits easily in any pack/vest that carries avy gear
phone number stored in phone for local patrol/emerg response
whistle
SOL bivy
food/bar
ibuprofen
it's not the "correct" answer for OP, just my n=1
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12-06-2021, 12:08 PM #32
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12-06-2021, 04:39 PM #33Registered User
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If you are truly just waiting for rescue, then the most important thing after ABCs is the waiting.
Watever gear you need to sit around for however long it takes.
Including a snicker bar and phone battery. Not uncommon for a phone battery to die in the cold, just when it really mattets.
A- personally, not carrying airways.
B- Microshield type masks may not be worth using. My one experience with one resulted in chucking mine out. Not carrying an actual mask. And- super low chance that that is a life saver.
C- Some stuff to stop bleeding makes sense.
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12-06-2021, 04:51 PM #34
I should have included it above - but mild pain killers (Ibuprofen, acetaminophen, etc) should also be in your kit. It can relieve pain while waiting for rescue.
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12-06-2021, 04:53 PM #35
Deep puncture wound? Like a puncture wound from a tree branch?
if you are injured immobile on snow, unless it’s spring sun, you are going to get cold quick and that may become the most pressing concern.
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12-06-2021, 07:13 PM #36Registered User
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Space blankets aren't going to stop the conductive heat loss of someone laying in the snow. Get them off the snow and onto a pack or something that will insulate them from the ground. Build a snow wall around them if they're stable and give them any extra clothing that's available. Sugary snacks and heat packs are also good.
For bleeding, you're not going to get good visibility on a wound unless you get their shell/base layer cut off and expose it. It's a tough call but if you're really concerned about them bleeding out before actual medics arrive and you'll want some trauma shears to expose and assess the wound. Balance that against cutting up their expensive weather protection and increasing the potential for hypothermia. It gets pretty complex and having a WFR is really helpful in deciding how to act.
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12-06-2021, 07:19 PM #37Registered User
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If you're considering using quickclot bandage or tourniquet in the backcountry -- you're in a situation where stopping the bleed and hypovolemic shock is the priority concern over hypothermia. You can put more layers on someone from around your rescue party. You can't put blood back in.
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12-07-2021, 03:36 PM #38Registered User
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12-07-2021, 03:59 PM #39
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12-07-2021, 04:24 PM #40
I ski at the same place you do, I'm planning to make some adjustments for this year in what I carry but haven't done it yet. It's on my list in the next week or two. There are people in here with much more experience giving advice, so I'll try to explain my thoughts so you can decide if my reasoning is bad.
What I have
1. beater skins + voile straps. They aren't perfect but in some cases they will be better than wallowing uphill to try to get to someone. Summit had a post years ago about getting up to a mag in a treewell, it stuck with me.
2. Space blanket or emergency bivy bag. Takes up less room than a beer, could be useful while waiting.
3. Small first aid kit. I need to fill it back up with otc pain medications. I realized last year I had given all mine away when I didn't have any after a crash. Felt bad, but luckily it wasn't worse and someone else had some.
4. 20 ft of cord. Credit to ACH for this one, alpental has creek holes. Haven't needed it but I'd rather have it than not. Planning to rethink this a bit, might decide longer is better. Plus a pulley? Someone on here almost got eaten by a creek hole last season.
5. Backup gloves/mittens.
Things I'm planning to add.
6. Spare shell or a tarp. My spare jacket got stolen out of my car recently, I'm thinking a tarp might be a smarter call. Mostly concerned about days with heavy snow down low and 32 degree snow falling.
7. Foam pad. The backpack is already useful to get under someone for insulation from the snow, but a foam sheet seems like it would be more valuable or a good addition. It can get cold waiting out there.
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12-07-2021, 04:58 PM #41
Add a chocolate bar to the list.
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12-07-2021, 05:50 PM #42User
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12-07-2021, 06:47 PM #43Registered User
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Forgot to add a flask of cognac.
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12-07-2021, 07:01 PM #44
A very well rounded pharmaceutical regime occupies a respectable chunk of my daily grab and go first aid kit.
Is it radix panax notoginseng? - splat
This is like hanging yourself but the rope breaks. - DTM
Dude Listen to mtm. He's a marriage counselor at burning man. - subtle plague
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12-07-2021, 08:11 PM #45
I would emphasize keeping the victim warm. My personal experience with an inbounds spine fracture is that I was shivering badly by the time they got me loaded up. My medical experience agrees. *
I wouldn't recommend quick clot. You can stop brachial artery bleeding with direct pressure. ER docs like to cover a bleeding wound with a ton of gauze, wrap it up and put the person in a corner somewhere. Bleeding wounds are way down on the list of skiing injuries. Don't worry too much about sterility, just make the bleeding stop.
Get trained on how to stop bleeding with pressure, how to deal with a potential spine injury without making it worse, how to stabilize a fracture or dislocation with severe deformity that might be compromising blood flow or nerve function (can be done with ski pole and clothing items.). Don't give the person anything to eat, they may need surgery, and for that they need an empty stomach. Water is ok.
If you're inbounds you're almost always best off waiting for patrol to do anything except in the unlikely event of external bleeding.
Protect the injured person from getting hit. Watched my kid and partner handling an injury at the top of North Bowl of Headwall at Olympic Valley and some guy fell and slid into them. Fortunately no further damage done, and a voly showed up shortly to warn people away.
Your first aid kit is between your ears.
(When I was hurt I was super impressed about how well ski patrol (the lead patroller was NSP) was trained in dealing with a spine injury. )
*I'm a vascular surgeon but you're better off taking advice from a patroller, EMT, etc--someone who treats a lot of injuries in the field, not the hospital.
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12-07-2021, 09:33 PM #46Registered User
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For the purposes of my original question (where patrol is 30-60 mins away), it seems like keeping victim warm is the primary concern. Would some hand warmers stuffed under the victims base layers be a better bang for buck than a space blanket, etc?
To Abraham, the Paracord is a great idea for out the gates, and even in the gates (felsen).
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12-07-2021, 09:47 PM #47Registered User
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Respectfully disagree. I worked a scene where a teenager almost bled out due to a brachial artery slice in his armpit last spring on the hill. Without quickclot, a ton of gauze, consistent direct pressure, and a chopper, the ER surgeon that patched him up (and later gave us a retrospective) assured us the outcome would've been much different.
Yes, don't worry about sterility. But bleeding wounds are up there on the injury list as they are one of the most common causes of shock for skiers. It's why even race coaches now commonly carry a stop the bleed kit.
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12-07-2021, 09:52 PM #48
If you don't mind carrying a few extra grams and are concerned with keeping a subject from getting colder, can't beat a 4-panel Ready-Heat torso blanket.
This combined with a tarp or extra shell should keep them warm for an hour or two. They only have a shelf life of a couple years though, so they are a bit spendy for the average 1st Aid kit.
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12-07-2021, 09:54 PM #49Registered User
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12-08-2021, 12:53 AM #50
Well yeah--of the causes of shock--hemorrhagic, cardiac, septic, and neurogenic--hemorrhagic would be at the top of the list. But by far the most common causes of major bleeding in ski injuries are ruptured solid organs--liver, spleen, kidney, the aorta, and big bones--femur and pelvis, and none of that is external and treatable with quick clot. (And of all those, only a femur fracture would be treatable with the tourniquet in a stop the bleed kit.)
There might be a few unusual instances where Quick Clot would be useful, perhaps your brachial artery injury case truly wasn't controllable with pressure (although in my experience tons of gauze is the enemy of direct pressure) and it might be an appropriate item for a patroller's pack, but for a recreational skier in the resort or in the BC, who has to consider how much to carry, more water, extra clothes, etc, are much more likely to be useful.
Humans are afraid of blood, for good reason. The usual response of most people (including most docs) when they see bleeding is to cover it up, when what is needed is to see the source of the bleeding as accurately as possible and to apply the pressure as directly as possible. You can't tell if your measures to stop bleeding are effective if you can't see the source.
Preventing hypothermia is critical in controlling bleeding. Drop a few degrees below normal and blood doesn't clot.
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