Title :
Miniature Electrical Stimulator for Hemorrhage Control
Author :
Brinton, Mark R. ; Mandel, Yossi ; Dalal, Roopa ; Palanker, Daniel
Author_Institution :
Electr. Eng. Dept., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Abstract :
Noncompressible hemorrhage is currently the most common cause of preventable death in battlefield and in civilian trauma injuries. Tourniquets, specialized wound dressings, and hemorrhage-inhibiting biomaterials are not sufficiently effective in arrest of noncompressible hemorrhage and often cause collateral tissue damage. An effective, easy-to-use, portable device is needed to reduce blood loss in trauma patients immediately following injury and to maintain hemorrhage control up to several hours-until the injured is evacuated to a medical facility. We developed a miniature electrical stimulator to induce vascular constriction and, thereby, reduce hemorrhage. Vasoconstriction of the rat femoral arteries and veins was studied with pulse durations in the range of 1 μs to 10 ms and repetition rate of 10 Hz. Pulse amplitude of 20 V, duration of 1 ms, and repetition rate of 10 Hz were found sufficient to induce rapid constriction down to 31 ± 2% of the initial diameter, which could be maintained throughout a two-hour treatment. Within one minute following treatment termination the artery dilated back to 88 ± 3% of the initial diameter, providing rapid restoration of blood perfusion. Histology indicated no damage to the vessel wall and endothelium seven days after stimulation. The same treatment reduced the blood loss following complete femoral artery resection by 68 ± 11%, compared to untreated vessels. Very low power consumption during stimulation (<;10 mW per 1.6 mm electrode) allows miniaturization of the stimulator for portable battery-powered operation in the field to control the blood loss following vascular trauma.
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; biomedical electrodes; biomedical electronics; blood vessels; haemodynamics; injuries; low-power electronics; patient treatment; portable instruments; artery dilation; battlefield injuries; civilian trauma injuries; collateral tissue damage; complete femoral artery resection; easy-to-use portable device; electrode; endothelium damage; frequency 10 Hz; hemorrhage control; hemorrhage reduction; histology; low power consumption; miniature electrical stimulator development; noncompressible hemorrhage; portable battery-powered operation; pulse amplitude; pulse durations; rapid blood perfusion restoration; rat femoral artery vasoconstriction; rat femoral vein vasoconstriction; repetition rate; size 1.6 mm; stimulator miniaturization; time 1 min; time 1 mus to 10 ms; time 2 hour; time 7 day; trauma patient blood loss reduction; treatment termination; two-hour treatment; vascular constriction; vascular trauma; vessel wall damage; voltage 20 V; Arteries; Blood; Electrodes; Hemorrhaging; Injuries; Materials; Veins; Electrical stimulation; hemorrhage control; junctional bleeding; vascular trauma; vasoconstriction;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2014.2306672