When a soldier is shot on the battlefield, the emergency treatment can seem as brutal as the injury itself. A medic must pack gauze directly into the wound cavity, sometimes as deep as 5 inches into the body, to stop bleeding from an artery.
Even with this emergency treatment, many soldiers still bleed to death; hemorrhage is a leading cause of death on the battlefield. “Gauze bandages just don’t work for anything serious,” says Steinbaugh, who tended to injured soldiers during more than a dozen deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. When Steinbaugh retired in April 2012 after a head injury, he joined an Oregon-based startup called RevMedx, a small group of veterans, scientists, and engineers who were working on a better way to stop bleeding.
The team’s early efforts were inspired by Fix-a-Flat foam for repairing tires. “That’s what we pictured as the perfect solution: something you could spray in, it would expand, and bleeding stops,” says Steinbaugh. “But we found that blood pressure is so high, blood would wash the foam right out.”
Great invention!
GLENMONT, N.Y. (THECOUNT) — Delmar, New York teen, Mason Ruggaber, has been identified as the…
RAPIDES PARISH, LA. (THECOUNT) — A Pineville, Louisiana man is dead after his motorcycle left…
BROOKLYN PARK, MN. (THECOUNT) — North Dakota State Representative Liz Conmy of Fargo and her…
CHICAGO, IL. (THECOUNT) — A Chicago Police Department officer was shot and killed Saturday inside…
CADDO COUNTY, OKLA. (THECOUNT) — Langston Alan Pratt, of Calumet, Oklahoma, was killed early Saturday…
BARTOW COUNTY, GA. (THECOUNT) — Georgia man, Patrick "Pat" Ramsey, died Friday night after his…