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MED-TAC International
MED-TAC International's Oxygen Delivery collection covers the full spectrum of supplemental oxygen equipment: portable oxygen cylinders, regulators, non-rebreather masks, simple face masks, nasal cannulas, bag-valve masks (BVM), and portable oxygen delivery systems. Stocked for EMS providers, fire/rescue teams, tactical medics, and wilderness medicine teams where supplemental oxygen is a critical component of trauma resuscitation and medical stabilization.
Why Is Supplemental Oxygen Critical in Trauma and Prehospital Care?
Supplemental oxygen plays a central role in trauma resuscitation by addressing two of the three legs of the "lethal triad" — hypothermia, acidosis, and coagulopathy — that kill trauma patients in the prehospital environment. Hemorrhagic shock causes tissue hypoxia as circulating red blood cells fall and oxygen delivery to end organs fails. Supplemental oxygen increases the fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO₂), maximizing oxygen saturation of the remaining hemoglobin and buying time for hemorrhage control and resuscitation. In traumatic brain injury (TBI), even brief periods of hypoxia — SpO₂ below 90% — are independently associated with worse neurological outcomes. Prehospital oxygen is also used to manage cardiac events, CO poisoning, respiratory distress, and altitude illness. The Joint Trauma System Clinical Practice Guidelines and TCCC protocols both address oxygenation management in the prehospital setting. See the full respiratory support category at Respiratory Support.
How Do Oxygen Delivery Devices Compare by Flow Rate and FiO₂?
Each oxygen delivery device provides a different achievable FiO₂ (fraction of inspired oxygen) at standard flow rates. Selecting the right device depends on the patient's respiratory effort, clinical status, and oxygen supply available.
| Device | Flow Rate | Approx. FiO₂ | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal Cannula | 1–6 LPM | 24–44% | Mild hypoxia, spontaneous breathing, tolerant patients |
| Simple Face Mask | 6–10 LPM | 35–55% | Moderate hypoxia, supplemental O2 for respiratory distress |
| Non-Rebreather Mask (NRB) | 10–15 LPM | 60–90% | Serious hypoxia, trauma, CO poisoning, spontaneous breathing |
| Bag-Valve Mask (BVM) w/ O2 | 15 LPM | Up to 100% with reservoir | Respiratory arrest, assisted ventilation, apneic patients |
| Demand Valve / Flow-Restricted NRB | On-demand | ~96% | Conserves O2 supply, self-administered, industrial rescue |
What Is a Bag-Valve Mask and When Is It Used in Prehospital Care?
A bag-valve mask (BVM) — sometimes called an Ambu bag — is a self-inflating resuscitation device used to deliver positive-pressure ventilation to patients in respiratory arrest or with inadequate spontaneous breathing. The BVM consists of a silicone or rubber self-inflating bag, a one-way valve, an oxygen reservoir bag, and a face mask in adult, pediatric, and infant sizes. When connected to supplemental oxygen at 15 LPM and used with a reservoir, a BVM can deliver approximately 100% FiO₂. In TCCC and prehospital trauma protocols, BVM ventilation is indicated for airway-compromised patients after airway adjuncts (OPA/NPA) have been placed. Proper mask seal and two-provider technique significantly improve tidal volume delivery. The BVM is the standard backup device before advanced airway placement and is a required component in most ALS and BLS kit standards. View related airway supplies at Airway Management Kits & Supplies.
What Portable Oxygen Systems Are Used in Tactical and Remote Settings?
Portable oxygen systems for tactical medicine and wilderness/remote care must balance oxygen volume against weight and packability. Standard EMS D-cylinders (425L) and E-cylinders (680L) are common on apparatus but heavy for foot-mobile operations. Compact aluminum M9 cylinders (170L) and M6 cylinders (164L) are common in tactical medic loadouts and jump bags where weight is a constraint. Oxygen concentrators — devices that extract oxygen from ambient air — are increasingly used in prolonged field care (PFC) and austere medical facility settings where resupply is limited, eliminating the need to transport cylinders. Regulators must be matched to the cylinder neck valve type (CGA-870 for post valves, CGA-540 for yoke valves); verify compatibility before purchasing. For tactical and remote EMS oxygen setups, see the Fire/Rescue/EMS Packs & Cases collection for O2 bags and carriers.
Stock Your Oxygen Delivery System
Regulators, masks, BVMs, nasal cannulas — everything for prehospital oxygen management, sourced direct.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a non-rebreather mask and a simple face mask?+
How long does a portable oxygen cylinder last in the field?+
Can a BVM be used without supplemental oxygen?+
What regulator type is used for portable EMS oxygen cylinders?+
What does SpO₂ tell providers about oxygen delivery effectiveness?+
Are oxygen delivery products available for tactical medic loadouts?+
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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.