Test results show Combat Gauze field bandages and WoundStat granules both demonstrated marked improvements over what's currently used to control bleeding in the field, said Col. Paul Cordts of the ...
WALLINGFORD, Conn., June 22 (UPI) --Z-Medica's QuikClot Combat Gauze has again been recommended the "hemostatic dressing of choice" for the U.S. military. The recommendation comes from the U.S.
The maker of a blood-clotting gauze now carried by every U.S. combat soldier and Marine is trying to break into the civilian medical market. Z-Medica of Wallingford, Conn., introduced the QuikClot ...
Z-Medica Corporation, a medical device company developing innovative hemostatic agents, today announced that it has developed QuikClot Combat Gauze LE, a new version of its QuikClot Combat Gauze ...
Application of QuikClot Combat Gauze® shows 100% success in achieving hemostasis in swine with arterial bleeding in extreme physiologic conditions often associated with military combat, trauma, and ...
“I grabbed the combat gauze, ripped it open and applied it to his neck. I applied pressure, rendered aid until EMS got on the scene,” Kinsella, a 17-year veteran of the force, told The Post. The EMS ...
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 11 (UPI) -- U.S. company SAM Medical Products announced the launch of its new gauze designed to control traumatic bleeding in emergency response combat situations. SAM has ...
WASHINGTON -- The Army continues to improve battlefield medicine by sending two new first-aid products into theater that will potentially save more Soldiers' lives, said Army medical officials at a ...
UC Santa Barbara Chemistry Professor Galen Stucky has been honored for his role in the development of a blood-clotting gauze that is helping save soldiers who suffer severe, life-threatening injuries ...
I just saw that the Army named this product one of the "Top Ten Greatest Inventions of 2008."Now, I know that there were a number of these rapid clotting products fielded, but I thought most, if not ...
A consignment of life-saving combat gauze donated by an American drug company for treatment of people wounded by Nepal’s earthquakes has gone missing. No one knows whether the consignment was ...
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