Filips says he envisions his clamp being stocked in both civilian and combat ambulances and hospitals. They could also prove useful to, say, mountaineers. The clamp will come in a sterile container that resembles a mouthguard holder. Applying pressure evenly across the seal, the clamp could conceivably stay in place for hours until surgery is possible. It won't, of course, stop internal bleeding. Expected to cost $65, the ITClamp is now in pre-production and being sent to various regulatory offices for review, including the FDA.
Saturday, March 22, 2014
ITClamp
ITClamp
After three tours in Afghanistan as a trauma surgeon
for the Canadian Navy, Dr. Dennis Filips was inspired -- by a simple hair clip
-- to design a medical clamp that can stop traumatic wound bleeding in a matter
of seconds. Filips' firm reports that its aim is to allow medics, soldiers, and
first responders to better treat three of the most preventable causes of trauma
deaths: massive bleeding, tension pneumothorax (cardiovascular compromise
resulting from a collapsed lung), and airway obstruction (blockage of the upper
airway).While the clamp isn't going to replace the tourniquet anytime soon
(certain wounds are so messy and massive that a clamp won't cut it), it could
prove useful for smaller, cleaner wounds, as well as in places where
tourniquets won't work (think neck, abdomen, groin).
Filips says he envisions his clamp being stocked in both civilian and combat ambulances and hospitals. They could also prove useful to, say, mountaineers. The clamp will come in a sterile container that resembles a mouthguard holder. Applying pressure evenly across the seal, the clamp could conceivably stay in place for hours until surgery is possible. It won't, of course, stop internal bleeding. Expected to cost $65, the ITClamp is now in pre-production and being sent to various regulatory offices for review, including the FDA.
Filips says he envisions his clamp being stocked in both civilian and combat ambulances and hospitals. They could also prove useful to, say, mountaineers. The clamp will come in a sterile container that resembles a mouthguard holder. Applying pressure evenly across the seal, the clamp could conceivably stay in place for hours until surgery is possible. It won't, of course, stop internal bleeding. Expected to cost $65, the ITClamp is now in pre-production and being sent to various regulatory offices for review, including the FDA.
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