Hey you forgot the latex or nitrile gloves for the care giver; in this day and age you touch no ones blood / body fluids but your own without gloves on. — Phil
Cleaning the wound after stopping the bleeding will cause the wound to just start bleeding all over again (breaks up the clots you just formed). A rinse first would be best. Of course, if it is life threatening, stopping the bleeding is a priority (and cleaning is NOT). — Al
direct pressure and bind tight to stop bleeding
then evac out to road and stitches and disinfectants — fgcfire8
+1 on the nitrile gloves- It's like showing mountain bikers without helmets.
— steve
Also do not remove the bandage- if it soaks through with blood- reinforce it with another bandage. — steve
The gloves #1!!,The bleeding may wash a lot of contaminets out, I wouldnt wash it let the ER debride,Never remove blody bandage wrap over it, removing will tear away clotting,dont use Tourniquet unless yer missing parts, use pressure points, dont forget treating for shock. Dont like yer dressing, it wont stay, wrap with roller gauze. — Mark (paramedic)
I would twist the duct tape, as in butterfly, to keep it very narrow over the cut — Richcurran
Closing a contaminated wound in the back country is a recipe for an infection. NO one in the medical field advocates any type of wound closure in the field. — Jim physician assistant
I recently experienced having to deal with a small but very open wound on my finger... fat cells and all. And what worked exceedingly well for me was to clean it out by sucking/spitting, rinsing with cold water in case I missed anything, slight pressure to stop bleeding, gently packing cayenne pepper in it and covering with dressing/tape.
This is not the first time I've tested the limits of cayenne pepper. And unfortunately it won't be the last, I'm sure. It functions as a sterilizer, coagulant, insta-scab as it dries but still allows the wound to heal properly (daily cleaning, reapplying the cayenne (until day comes when it's obviously unnecessary to do so), new dressing) and has greatly aided in next-to-invisible scars.
And when everyone was confident I would need stitches a day or two post-injury, I ended up not only not needing them but barely being able to see the injury less than 4 weeks later.
Cheers... and may none of you ever have to try this. — Christopher
I recently experienced having to deal with a small but very open wound on my finger... fat cells and all. And what worked exceedingly well for me was to clean it out by sucking/spitting, rinsing with cold water in case I missed anything, slight pressure to stop bleeding, gently packing cayenne pepper in it and covering with dressing/tape.
This is not the first time I've tested the limits of cayenne pepper. And unfortunately it won't be the last, I'm sure. It functions as a sterilizer, coagulant, insta-scab as it dries but still allows the wound to heal properly (daily cleaning, reapplying the cayenne (until day comes when it's obviously unnecessary to do so), new dressing) and has greatly aided in next-to-invisible scars.
And when everyone was confident I would need stitches a day or two post-injury, I ended up not only not needing them but barely being able to see the injury less than 4 weeks later.
Cheers... and may none of you ever have to try this. — Christopher
Your best shots: BACKPACKER readers have been to some spectacular places and ...
TIP 9: Check the Weather
Most weather reports don't apply to backcountry or mountainous terrain. Gather specific information by calling ranger stations, checking guide books, and researching monthly climate trends.
READERS COMMENTS
Page 1
Hey you forgot the latex or nitrile gloves for the care giver; in this day and age you touch no ones blood / body fluids but your own without gloves on.
— Phil
Cleaning the wound after stopping the bleeding will cause the wound to just start bleeding all over again (breaks up the clots you just formed). A rinse first would be best. Of course, if it is life threatening, stopping the bleeding is a priority (and cleaning is NOT).
— Al
direct pressure and bind tight to stop bleeding
then evac out to road and stitches and disinfectants
— fgcfire8
+1 on the nitrile gloves- It's like showing mountain bikers without helmets.
— steve
Also do not remove the bandage- if it soaks through with blood- reinforce it with another bandage.
— steve
The gloves #1!!,The bleeding may wash a lot of contaminets out, I wouldnt wash it let the ER debride,Never remove blody bandage wrap over it, removing will tear away clotting,dont use Tourniquet unless yer missing parts, use pressure points, dont forget treating for shock. Dont like yer dressing, it wont stay, wrap with roller gauze.
— Mark (paramedic)
I would twist the duct tape, as in butterfly, to keep it very narrow over the cut
— Richcurran
Closing a contaminated wound in the back country is a recipe for an infection. NO one in the medical field advocates any type of wound closure in the field.
— Jim physician assistant
I recently experienced having to deal with a small but very open wound on my finger... fat cells and all. And what worked exceedingly well for me was to clean it out by sucking/spitting, rinsing with cold water in case I missed anything, slight pressure to stop bleeding, gently packing cayenne pepper in it and covering with dressing/tape.
This is not the first time I've tested the limits of cayenne pepper. And unfortunately it won't be the last, I'm sure. It functions as a sterilizer, coagulant, insta-scab as it dries but still allows the wound to heal properly (daily cleaning, reapplying the cayenne (until day comes when it's obviously unnecessary to do so), new dressing) and has greatly aided in next-to-invisible scars.
And when everyone was confident I would need stitches a day or two post-injury, I ended up not only not needing them but barely being able to see the injury less than 4 weeks later.
Cheers... and may none of you ever have to try this.
— Christopher
I recently experienced having to deal with a small but very open wound on my finger... fat cells and all. And what worked exceedingly well for me was to clean it out by sucking/spitting, rinsing with cold water in case I missed anything, slight pressure to stop bleeding, gently packing cayenne pepper in it and covering with dressing/tape.
This is not the first time I've tested the limits of cayenne pepper. And unfortunately it won't be the last, I'm sure. It functions as a sterilizer, coagulant, insta-scab as it dries but still allows the wound to heal properly (daily cleaning, reapplying the cayenne (until day comes when it's obviously unnecessary to do so), new dressing) and has greatly aided in next-to-invisible scars.
And when everyone was confident I would need stitches a day or two post-injury, I ended up not only not needing them but barely being able to see the injury less than 4 weeks later.
Cheers... and may none of you ever have to try this.
— Christopher
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