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Tourniquets

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MED-TAC International

Tourniquets stop life-threatening limb hemorrhage — the leading cause of preventable death in trauma. Limb and junctional designs from the brands that field-tested them, including CoTCCC-recommended windlass and ratchet platforms.

Tourniquets are the M in MARCH. Pair with hemostatic gauze and wound packing for bleeding a tourniquet can't reach.

How to Choose a Tourniquet

A tourniquet is a mechanical clamp on arterial flow. To work, it has to generate enough circumferential pressure to occlude the artery beneath the muscle — which is why width and a true mechanical advantage matter more than how tight you think you've pulled it. A narrow strap or an improvised band rarely reaches occlusion pressure and can worsen bleeding by trapping venous return while leaving arterial inflow open.

Limb vs. junctional

TypeMechanismUse
Limb — windlassRod twisted to tighten a wide strapArm and leg hemorrhage; the field standard
Limb — ratchetRatcheting buckle drives incremental pressureLarger limbs, gloved or low-dexterity application
JunctionalTargeted compression at the groin or axillaBleeding too proximal for a limb tourniquet

Application doctrine

  • High and tight — place on the proximal third of the limb, never over a joint, when the bleed is catastrophic or the site is obscured.
  • Tighten to no bleeding and no distal pulse — partial pressure that stops oozing but not the artery increases blood loss.
  • Second tourniquet if needed — place side-by-side and proximal to the first if one does not control the bleed.
  • Time-mark it — write the time of application; conversion is a later, protocol-driven decision.
Standardizing a program? Issue one proven tourniquet model and train to it — mixed inventories cost seconds under stress. Anchor selection and loadout with the trauma-response brief.

Why "CoTCCC-recommended" matters

The Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care evaluates tourniquets against survivability data and publishes a recommended list. A recommendation reflects field and laboratory performance — it is not an FDA approval or certification. Choosing from that list, and avoiding narrow improvised bands, is the single highest-yield decision in a bleeding-control loadout.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best type of tourniquet?

For limb hemorrhage, a CoTCCC-recommended windlass or ratchet tourniquet with a wide strap is the field standard. Width and a true mechanical advantage are what reach arterial occlusion; narrow or improvised bands often fail to stop arterial flow.

Where do you place a tourniquet?

Place it high and tight on the proximal third of the limb when bleeding is catastrophic or the wound site is unclear, and never directly over a joint. Tighten until bleeding stops and the distal pulse is gone.

Can you leave a tourniquet on too long?

Tourniquets can remain in place for a meaningful window; the priority is stopping the bleed. Always mark the application time and leave conversion or removal to protocol and medical direction, not guesswork.

Do I need a junctional tourniquet?

A junctional tourniquet addresses bleeding at the groin or axilla that is too proximal for a limb device. Agencies covering blast, gunshot, or high-energy trauma should consider one; many civilian kits do not require it.

Are these tourniquets CoTCCC approved?

CoTCCC issues recommendations, not approvals or certifications. The committee evaluates devices against survivability data and publishes a recommended list; this collection prioritizes those recommended designs.

Related collections

MED-TAC International Corp. is a clinician-founded, veteran-led tactical medicine provider. Product references to CoTCCC reflect committee recommendations and do not imply FDA approval or certification. This content is educational and is not a substitute for hands-on training or medical direction.

Evidence-Based Selection
CoTCCC Aligned
SDVOSB Certified
500+ Agencies

Why MED-TAC's Evidence-Based Approach Outperforms

Multi-brand curation means optimal performance — not vendor compromises.

Multi-Brand Curation

We select the best component from each manufacturer — not whatever a single vendor pushes.

  • Best tourniquet from Company A (98% effectiveness)
  • Superior hemostatic from Company D (clinical proven)
  • Optimized kit performance over vendor politics

Evidence-Based Selection

Components chosen based on clinical studies and field data — not marketing claims.

98%
Tourniquet Effectiveness
94%
Hemostatic Success
96%
Chest Seal Adhesion
95%
User Satisfaction

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