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"Occlusion of arterial flow in the extremities at
subsystolic pressures through the use of wide tourniquet
cuffs" Graham B, Breault MJ, McEwen JA, McGraw RW,
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver Canada: Clin Orthop 1993 Jan;(286):257-61
Abstract: Tourniquet-induced peripheral
neuropathy is at least partially attributable to excessive forces
applied to the nerves beneath cuffs inflated to high pressures.
Lowering the inflation pressure to the minimum necessary to
obtain an effective arrest of blood flow distal to the tourniquet
cuff should increase the safety of these systems. Tourniquet
cuffs with widths varying from 4.5 cm to 80 cm were applied to
the upper and lower extremities of 34 healthy, normotensive
volunteers. Occlusion pressure for the arterial system under
study was estimated by determining that level of cuff inflation
at which the distal pulse became detectable by ultrasonic
flowmetry. The occlusion pressure was inversely proportional to
the ratio of tourniquet cuff width to limb circumference and was
in the subsystolic range at a cuff width to limb circumference
ratio above 0.5. Wide tourniquet cuffs can achieve an effective
arrest of the regional arterial circulation at subsystolic
pressures of inflation. Wide cuffs may reduce the risk of
tourniquet-induced injury to underlying soft tissues by lowering
the inflation pressure required to secure a bloodless field.
PMID: 8425355 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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