Is the FOX Chest Seal vented or non-vented?
The FOX Chest Seal is a vented design. The venting mechanism is provided by the corrugated, high-visibility peel tab, which creates a channeled pathway for air egress during exhalation while the hydrogel adhesive maintains the peripheral seal during inhalation. This simple no-valve design has no mechanical components to fail or require specific orientation, making it reliable across the seal's operating temperature range of 0°F to 131°F (-18°C to +55°C). The design also functions as a re-sealable wound burping mechanism.
What wound size can the FOX Chest Seal cover?
The FOX Chest Seal is designed to cover penetrating injuries up to 15 cm (approximately 6 inches) in maximum length. The deployed seal measures 5" × 5", providing adequate coverage for most gunshot wounds, stab wounds, and shrapnel injuries to the thorax. For wounds larger than 15 cm, or wounds with irregular margins from blast injuries, consider the HALO XL or a larger format seal. The FOX Twin Pack provides two seals for simultaneous treatment of entry and exit wounds.
How does the FOX Chest Seal adhesive perform in extreme conditions?
The FOX Chest Seal uses a medical-grade hydrogel adhesive that maintains strong adhesion strength at both temperature extremes: -18°C (0°F) and +55°C (131°F). Testing has confirmed adhesion performance remains consistently above specification standards across these temperature ranges. The adhesive bonds effectively to skin contaminated with blood, sweat, hair, sand, or water. All dressings have been tested while carried flat, rolled, and folded inside an IFAK over an 8-week period at extreme temperatures without loss of adhesion performance.
What is the corrugated peel tab and how does it help during an emergency?
The corrugated peel tab on the FOX Chest Seal serves multiple functions. Its corrugated (ridged) surface provides a tactile gripping surface that can be located and grasped quickly under stress, even with gloved hands. When the seal is first applied, the tab creates the venting channel. If tension pneumothorax develops after seal application, the corrugated tab allows the responder to quickly lift the seal edge ('burp' the wound) to release pressure, then re-seal. The high-visibility color of the tab ensures it is easily located for this purpose. This single-tab design simplifies the burping procedure compared to designs requiring the responder to find and lift a specific corner of the seal.
Why is the FOX Chest Seal Twin Pack appropriate for law enforcement and SWAT applications?
Law enforcement tactical units and SWAT teams face the same penetrating chest trauma risks as military personnel when responding to active shooter situations, room entries, and dynamic incidents. The FOX Chest Seal Twin Pack's compact footprint (6.25" × 6.25" × 0.125" packaged, 1.5 oz for both seals) fits easily into SWAT IFAK configurations, plate carrier medical pouches, and duty bag trauma kits. The simple no-valve mechanism reduces training burden for officers who may not receive the same medical training depth as military medics. FDA Listed and CE Marked construction ensures regulatory compliance for law enforcement procurement.