Head Injury on the Street (2026): When TXA Matters, When It Doesn’t, and the First 10 Minutes That Decide Outcomes
BOTTOM LINE: A no-BS 2026 playbook for EMS/LE medics: immediate priorities in head injury, blood pressure/oxygenation targets, and when tranexamic acid (TXA) is actually indicated—plus kit and protocol checklists.
Operational takeaway: In suspected traumatic brain injury (TBI), you don’t “wait for CT.” You protect oxygenation and perfusion now. TXA is sometimes part of that—but only for the right patient, in the right window.
TL;DR (for the rig)
- TBI kills twice: the initial hit, then the secondary hit (hypoxia + hypotension + hyperventilation + delay).
- Your job in the first 10 minutes: airway/ventilation discipline, perfusion discipline, and fast transport to definitive care.
- TXA isn’t magic: it’s a tool with a narrow “yes” box.
Why this matters right now (2026 reality)
Across EMS systems, “head injury” is one of the most common high-risk calls—and one of the easiest places to accidentally harm outcomes with good intentions:
- Bagging too fast.
- Accepting “SBP 90 is fine.”
- Treating agitation as a behavior problem instead of hypoxia/hypercarbia/bleed.
- “Saving time” by skipping oxygenation setup.
This post gives you a field decision model that works with limited information and high consequences.
The no-BS decision ladder: what actually kills TBI patients prehospital
1) Hypoxia (SpO2 low)
If they desaturate, everything else becomes harder: the brain doesn’t tolerate oxygen debt.
2) Hypotension (perfusion low)
One low blood pressure episode can be catastrophic. Don’t celebrate “barely palpable.”
3) Hyperventilation (CO2 too low)
Over-ventilating drops CO2, constricts cerebral vessels, and can worsen ischemia. Hyperventilation is not routine therapy.
4) Delay to neurosurgical capability
You can’t fix a subdural in the ambulance.
Where TXA fits (and where it doesn’t)
What TXA is (in one line)
TXA is an antifibrinolytic: it helps stabilize clot by inhibiting clot breakdown.
The trap
People hear “TXA saves trauma patients,” and they start giving it broadly—late, or in patients who don’t match an evidence-based indication.
A clean field rule (based on current guidance language)
Some guidance has explicitly described TXA consideration in isolated head injury based on severity and timing.
One recent explainer of NICE NG232 states that for adults (16+) with head injury and GCS ≤12, not thought to have active extracranial bleeding, TXA may be considered as a 2 g IV bolus, given as soon as possible and within 2 hours of injury, and before imaging (prehospital or hospital setting). (StudyFRCEM’s NG232 summary: https://studyfrcem.co.uk/blog/nice-head-injury-guidelines-ng232-for-frcem-sba)
Also note: NICE NG232 is the NICE guideline for head injury: assessment and early management and includes recommendations spanning immediate management at the scene, ED assessment, and investigation pathways. (NICE NG232 overview: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng232)
TXA “YES” box (prehospital)
Consider TXA when ALL are true:
- Time: within ~2 hours of injury (earlier is better).
- Severity: clearly sick (think GCS 12 or less).
- Mechanism/concern: significant head trauma with risk of intracranial bleeding.
- No obvious uncontrolled extracranial hemorrhage driving the shock picture (that becomes a different major trauma pathway).
TXA “NO / NOT ROUTINE” box
- Mild head injury, normal mentation, normal vitals.
- Late presentation well beyond the early window.
- “Just in case” dosing when the real issue is airway/ventilation or hypotension.
The first 10 minutes: a field sequence that doesn’t get you burned
Step 0: Scene, mechanism, and quick severity sort
Use the blunt triage you already know:
- GCS trending down?
- Abnormal pupils?
- Repeated vomiting?
- Seizure?
- Anticoagulants/antiplatelets?
- Hypotension or hypoxia?
If this is a true TBI, treat it like time-critical trauma.
Step 1: Airway posture and suction discipline
- Position to protect airway; suction early.
- If you need an adjunct, have one that you can place fast.
Gear link (airway basics): Nasopharyngeal Airway (NPA) Kit: https://www.tactical-medicine.com/products/nasopharyngeal-airway-npa-kit
Step 2: Oxygenation and ventilation: slow is smooth
- Pre-oxygenate.
- Avoid aggressive bagging.
- If you ventilate: use capnography if you have it; aim for normal ventilation unless there are clear herniation signs.
Step 3: Perfusion: stop accepting “low but present”
TBI + hypotension is a lethal combo. Treat hypotension aggressively and early.
- Control other bleeding.
- Establish access (IV/IO).
Gear link (vascular access): IV/IO collection: https://www.tactical-medicine.com/collections/iv-io
Specific kit: Saline Lock Kit: https://tactical-medicine.com/products/saline-lock-kit
Step 4: TXA decision (fast)
If patient fits your YES box, don’t delay.
- Document injury time.
- Give TXA per your medical direction/protocol.
- Don’t let TXA distract you from airway/perfusion priorities.
Step 5: Transport: go where neurosurgery exists
TBI is destination medicine.
Infographic 1: TXA decision grid (field quick check)

Four questions before you give it: injury within 2 hours, adult with GCS ≤12, no major extracranial bleed driving shock, system protocol/medical direction allows. All YES → 2 g IV bolus. Any NO → don't freelance.
Infographic 2: "What to fix first" in head injury

Hypoxia, hypotension, over-bagging, and agitation are the four field problems that turn a survivable TBI into a bad outcome. Treat the cause, not the symptom.
Infographic 3: Minimal TBI add-on for your kit

Must-have: suction (manual/portable), BVM + adjuncts (NPA/OPA), capnography if your level allows, IV/IO start capability, tourniquets & pressure dressings for extracranial bleeding control.
Nice-to-have (mission dependent): head/neck immobilization per protocol, cold packs/active cooling if heat + exertion is in play, extra tape and securing devices, TXA per local protocol, pulse oximeter with waveform.
Where to shop (mission-based loadouts): Shop by MARCH Protocol — build around the preventable-death priorities.
Spanish Version (Español)
Traumatismo Craneal en la Calle (2026): Cuándo Importa el TXA, Cuándo No, y los Primeros 10 Minutos que Deciden el Pronóstico
Resumen operativo: En sospecha de lesión cerebral traumática (TBI/TEC), no se “espera la tomografía.” Se protege oxigenación y perfusión ya. El ácido tranexámico (TXA) a veces es parte del plan—pero solo en el paciente correcto y en el tiempo correcto.
Resumen rápido (para la ambulancia)
- El TBI mata dos veces: el golpe inicial y luego el “segundo golpe” (hipoxia + hipotensión + hiperventilación + demora).
- Tu misión en los primeros 10 minutos: disciplina de vía aérea/ventilación, disciplina de perfusión y traslado rápido.
- TXA no es magia: es una herramienta con una indicación estrecha.
Dónde encaja el TXA (y dónde NO)
Qué es el TXA (en una línea)
El TXA es un antifibrinolítico: ayuda a estabilizar el coágulo al reducir la degradación del mismo.
Regla práctica clara (lenguaje de guías actuales)
Un resumen reciente de NICE NG232 indica que en adultos (16+) con lesión de cabeza y GCS ≤12, sin sospecha de sangrado extracraneal activo, se puede considerar TXA como bolo IV de 2 g, administrado lo antes posible y dentro de 2 horas de la lesión, y antes de imágenes (prehospitalario u hospitalario). (StudyFRCEM: https://studyfrcem.co.uk/blog/nice-head-injury-guidelines-ng232-for-frcem-sba)
Además, NICE NG232 es la guía de NICE para lesión de cabeza: evaluación y manejo temprano, incluyendo recomendaciones de manejo inmediato en escena y transporte, evaluación en urgencias e investigación. (NICE NG232: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng232)
“SÍ” para TXA (prehospitalario)
Considera TXA si TODO es verdadero:
- Tiempo desde lesión: ≤2 horas.
- Severidad: paciente grave (p.ej., GCS 12 o menos).
- Sospecha real de sangrado intracraneal.
- No hay hemorragia extracraneal mayor como causa principal de shock.
“NO / no rutinario”
- Lesión leve con signos vitales normales.
- Presentación tardía.
- Dar TXA “por si acaso” cuando el problema real es hipoxia/hipotensión.
Los primeros 10 minutos: secuencia de campo
Paso 1: Vía aérea y succión
- Posiciona para proteger vía aérea.
- Succiona temprano.
Producto útil: Kit de cánula nasofaríngea (NPA): https://www.tactical-medicine.com/products/nasopharyngeal-airway-npa-kit
Paso 2: Oxigenación y ventilación
- Preoxigena.
- Evita ventilar rápido.
Paso 3: Perfusión
- No aceptes “bajo pero presente.”
- Controla sangrado, acceso IV/IO, reanimación según protocolo.
Colección IV/IO: https://www.tactical-medicine.com/collections/iv-io
Kit específico: Saline Lock Kit: https://tactical-medicine.com/products/saline-lock-kit
Paso 4: Decisión de TXA
Si cumple criterios, no demores.
Paso 5: Traslado
TBI es medicina de destino: ve donde haya capacidad neuroquirúrgica.
Cierre
Si quieres mejorar resultados en TBI, deja de “tratar números” y empieza a tratar lo que realmente mata: oxigenación, perfusión y tiempo.
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