IFAK Kit Builder - Chest Seals & Decompression Needles

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Select thoracic components for your MED-TAC IFAK Kit Builder. This sub-category includes vented chest seals for occlusive wound treatment, non-vented chest seals, and needle decompression devices for tension pneumothorax. Per TCCC guidelines, chest seals address the "R" (Respirations) phase of MARCH — the second priority after hemorrhage control.

Why Does Every IFAK Need a Chest Seal?

An open chest wound — any penetrating thoracic injury that breaches the chest wall — creates a sucking chest wound (open pneumothorax) that can collapse a lung within minutes. A chest seal occludes the wound, preventing air entry through the chest wall while allowing the casualty to breathe. TCCC guidelines and the Joint Trauma System mandate chest seal application for all penetrating chest wounds in tactical settings. CoTCCC currently recommends vented chest seals as the standard of care for most tactical environments to allow air and blood to vent and reduce the risk of tension pneumothorax development. Explore the full thoracic supplies range at Chest & Thoracic Supplies.

Vented vs. Non-Vented Chest Seals — Which Should I Choose for My IFAK?

Type Key Products Mechanism CoTCCC Status Best For
Vented Chest Seal HyFin Vent Twin Pack, SAM Chest Seal Vented One-way valve vents air & blood, prevents tension buildup Recommended (preferred) All penetrating chest wounds, tactical environments
Non-Vented Chest Seal HyFin Compact, Asherman Chest Seal Full occlusion; converts open to closed pneumothorax Recommended (secondary) Provider-supervised settings, when ND available
Needle Decompression Device ARS NCD 14g, NAR 10g Decompression Needle Releases pleural pressure via 2nd ICS MCL or 4th/5th ICS AAL Recommended (trained providers) Tension pneumothorax with clinical deterioration

When Is Needle Decompression Indicated in TCCC?

Tension pneumothorax — progressive air accumulation in the pleural space that compresses the heart and great vessels — is the second leading cause of preventable death in combat trauma. TCCC guidelines indicate needle decompression (ND) when a casualty has a penetrating chest wound or blunt chest trauma AND presents with: progressive respiratory distress, decreasing oxygen saturation, hypotension, or altered mental status consistent with tension physiology. The 2nd intercostal space, midclavicular line (2nd ICS MCL) is the traditional ND site; current JTS guidelines also support the 4th/5th ICS, anterior axillary line (AAL) for obese patients or those with significant chest wall thickness. Needle decompression devices in this category — including the ARS NCD — are intended for trained providers. The Respiratory Support collection contains additional airway and breathing supplies.

How Do I Apply a Chest Seal Correctly?

The application sequence per TCCC: (1) expose the chest and identify all wound sites — both entry and exit wounds require coverage; (2) wipe the wound area dry with a gauze pad to maximize seal adhesion; (3) remove the chest seal backing and place over the wound, centering the valve or patch over the defect; (4) press firmly around all edges to create a complete perimeter seal; (5) assess for tension pneumothorax development after sealing (particularly with non-vented seals). Always treat both entry and exit wounds. Twin-pack chest seals (e.g., HyFin Vent Twin Pack) are designed specifically for this two-wound protocol. Pair your chest seal selection with Hemostatic Agents for complete MARCH coverage.

Complete Your IFAK Thoracic Layer

Chest seal + decompression needle covers penetrating chest trauma in the "R" phase of MARCH.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do CoTCCC guidelines now prefer vented over non-vented chest seals?+
Non-vented chest seals can occasionally lead to tension pneumothorax if the pleural space continues to fill with air from a persistent lung leak. Vented seals use a one-way flutter valve that allows air and blood to escape while preventing atmospheric air from re-entering through the chest wall. This reduces the risk of iatrogenic tension pneumothorax — a complication observed in some non-vented seal deployments. CoTCCC recommends vented seals as the preferred configuration for most tactical environments.
Do I need to treat both the entry and exit wound with chest seals?+
Yes. TCCC protocol requires occlusion of all chest wall defects — both entry and exit wounds can allow air to enter the pleural cavity. This is why twin-pack chest seals (two individual seals packaged together) are the preferred IFAK configuration. Products like the HyFin Vent Twin Pack are specifically designed for this two-wound protocol, providing one seal for each defect.
What gauge needle is recommended for tactical needle decompression?+
Current JTS/CoTCCC guidelines recommend a 14-gauge or 10-gauge needle, minimum 3.25 inches in length, to ensure adequate chest wall penetration — particularly in personnel wearing body armor or with increased chest wall thickness. Standard 14g 3.25" catheters (e.g., ARS NCD) remain the most widely issued. Some units have transitioned to 10-gauge needles at the 4th/5th ICS AAL site for improved decompression rates. Length matters as much as gauge: inadequate length is the primary cause of failed needle decompression.
Can a non-trained bystander apply a chest seal?+
Chest seal application is taught in Stop the Bleed Advanced and TCCC courses and is within the scope of trained civilian first responders. The application itself — expose, dry, place, seal — is straightforward. Needle decompression, however, requires anatomical training and clinical judgment to identify tension pneumothorax; it is not recommended for untrained individuals. For public-access kits, vented chest seals are appropriate. ND devices should be reserved for trained personnel.
How do I choose between the HyFin Vent and SAM Chest Seal for my IFAK?+
Both are CoTCCC-recommended vented chest seals. The HyFin Vent (North American Rescue) uses a hydrogel adhesive with a triple-channel valve and is available in a twin-pack configuration. The SAM Chest Seal uses a gel adhesive with a flutter-valve vent. Primary selection criteria: adhesive performance on wet/bloody skin, valve reliability in environmental extremes (cold, heat, dirt), and pack size for your pouch. Many units use the HyFin Vent Twin Pack as standard due to NAR's established military supply chain. Training familiarity and unit standardization are also valid selection factors.

Related Collections

All products sourced from the actual brand manufacturer or authorized master distributors. CoTCCC recommendation status verified where applicable. Ships from MED-TAC International, Pembroke Pines, FL — clinician-founded, veteran-led, SDVOSB-certified.

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