Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part III: General Considerations of Wound
Management: Chapter XVI: Wounds and Injuries of the Soft Tissues
Treatment Priorities
United States Department of Defense
Whereas all of the foregoing is felt to represent optimum management of war wounds,
battlefields of the future may present medical officers with constraints beyond their
control that preclude optimum casualty management. The lack of air superiority may deny
aeromedical evacuation from forward areas. Tactical encirclement or weather may compel the
forward maneuver element to hold its wounded. Battalion surgeons or physician assistants
may find themselves in a position where they are denied the option of moving casualties to
definitive care facilities.
Medical personnel or equipment shortfalls may be the limiting factor. A
resource-workload mismatch may result from a casualty generation rate that overwhelms
medical capabilities. In situations such as these, the battalion surgeon and the medical
treatment facility chief surgeon must be prepared to limit treatment in consonance with
their capabilities and certain treatment priorities.
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The forward medical officer should observe the general principles of resuscitation to
the extent possible. The inability to surgically control high-grade hemorrhage may
necessitate the prolonged use of tourniquets.
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The early institution of systemic antibiotics is of prime importance, especially when
war wounds cannot be promptly treated surgically. Tetanus toxoid and morphine analgesia
are given.
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If any surgical and anesthetic capability exists, operative treatment of wounds is
usually limited to local anesthesia and wound incision to improve drainage Under these
circumstances, if wound incision is elected in the absence of blood transfusion
capability, care should be exercised to avoid hemorrhage.
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It is possible that even the larger definitive care facilities may find themselves
overwhelmed by casualties or understaffed due to combat losses of their personnel. The
area medical regulating officer may not be able to divert casualty excesses to other
facilities. Under circumstances such as these, appropriate care may have to be limited to
wound incision and antibiotics.
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Simple non-occlusive dressings should be utilized. These dressings should allow, to the
extent possible, egress of drainage from the wound.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
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Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
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