Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part III: General Considerations of Wound
Management: Chapter XXI: Amputations
Indications
United States Department of Defense
The following are clear indications for emergency amputations:
-
Massive injuries in which the components of an extremity are so badly mangled that the
extremity is obviously nonviable.
-
Extremities with severe involvement of skin, muscles, and bone with an anesthetic
terminus and irreparable nerve damage.
-
Overwhelming local infection, which, despite adequate surgical measures and antibiotic
therapy, endangers life.
-
Established death of a limb (vascular gangrene), where vascular repair has failed or has
proved to be impractical.
-
Massive septic gangrene (clostridial myositis) is a most compelling indication for
amputation. Anaerobic cellulitis or myositis confined to a single muscle group can be
managed by resection and is not an indication for amputation.
-
Secondary hemorrhage in the presence of severe infection, even though initial wound
surgery apparently may have been adequate. Included in this group are patients in whom the
tactical situation precluded adequate early surgical intervention.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
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Operational Medicine
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January 1, 2001 |
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