When should I use the ETD 8×10 instead of the standard 4 in. or 6 in. ETD?
Use the ETD 8×10 when the wound area exceeds what a 4 in. or 6 in. pad can adequately cover. Typical use cases include blast or fragmentation wounds with multiple entry points across a wide surface area, large exit wounds, abdominal wounds with broad tissue involvement, partial amputations with significant soft tissue disruption, and thoracic injuries spanning a large area. The 8×10 in. pad (80 sq. in. coverage) provides approximately 2–3× the coverage area of a standard 4 in. ETD pad, and the 70 in. wrap length provides extra bandage for secure circumferential application.
What is the difference between the ETD 8×10 and the NAR Stump/Abdominal ETD?
Both are large-format ETD-series bandages for large wounds, but they differ in pad size and wrap dimensions. The ETD 8×10 has an 8×10 in. non-adherent pad on a 4 in. elastic wrap (70 in. long). The NAR Stump/Abdominal ETD has a larger 12×12 in. pad on a 6 in. elastic wrap (70 in. long) and is specifically designed for traumatic amputations with stump coverage, abdominal eviscerations, and large burn wound coverage. The Stump/Abdominal ETD is the preferred option for amputation stump management; the ETD 8×10 is better matched to large thoracic wounds and blast pattern wounds on limbs or torso.
Is the ETD 8×10 appropriate for tourniquet conversion?
Yes. When transitioning a wound from tourniquet management to wound packing and pressure dressing during casualty transport, the ETD 8×10 is a suitable cover dressing over packed gauze on large wounds. After wound packing with NAR Compressed Gauze or equivalent, the ETD 8×10 pad provides broad coverage over the packed site while the elastic wrap secures the packing under pressure. The extended 70 in. wrap allows sufficient bandage length for multiple wrapping passes even on large extremity wounds.
Does the ETD 8×10 have the same application mechanism as other ETDs?
Yes. The ETD 8×10 uses the same NAR ETD design principles — no pressure bars or hooks, Quick-Grip Roll Control tabs to prevent unrolling, and a simple durable securing device that can be applied with gloved hands without specific technique. The wound pad is sewn directly onto the elastic wrap, maintaining the one-piece design. Application is identical to other ETD sizes: center the pad over the wound, wrap the elastic circumferentially with firm tension, and secure with the locking device.
What is the packaged size of the ETD 8×10 and does it fit standard IFAK pouches?
The ETD 8×10 packaged dimensions are L 4.125 in. × W 7 in. × D 1 in., weight 4 oz. The 7-inch width is larger than standard ETD packages due to the oversized pad, and it will not fit in IFAK pouches designed for standard-width bandages. It is best suited for medic bags, vehicle trauma kits, extended patrol kits, or any kit with sufficient pouch width to accommodate the 7-inch dimension. Check your pouch width before ordering for IFAK integration.
Is the ETD 8"×10" CoTCCC-recommended?
The ETD product line is CoTCCC-recommended as the standard field pressure dressing system. The 8"×10" variant is included in medic-level kit configurations where larger dressing coverage is required. It is NSN-listed through DLA and appears in enhanced IFAK and trauma cache configurations across US military medical programs.
When should I use the 8"×10" instead of the 6" ETD?
Use the 8"×10" when the wound surface is too large for the 6" pad to achieve full coverage — typically torso wounds, large extremity blast injuries, and wide avulsion injuries. If the 6" pad can fully cover the wound with overlap on all sides, the standard size is appropriate. Carry the 8"×10" as the large-wound contingency in any cache expected to treat mass-casualty or blast events.
Can the ETD 8"×10" be used for abdominal injuries?
Yes. The 8"×10" pad covers abdominal penetrating wounds and provides adequate surface area for many abdominal evisceration presentations. For the most severe truncal trauma, the Stump/Abdominal ETD offers a purpose-built geometry. Both are valid tools; the selection depends on wound type and what is available in the kit.
Does the 8"×10" use the same application technique as the 6" ETD?
Yes. The 8"×10" ETD uses the same integrated pressure applicator and securing tail system as the standard 6" ETD. Application technique is identical — anchor the pad, apply the pressure bar, wrap and secure the tail. The larger pad size requires no special training beyond standard ETD application skills.
What NSN applies to the ETD 8"×10" for procurement?
The ETD 8"×10" is listed under Federal Supply Class 6510 in the DLA catalog. The specific NSN for the current production run is available through the DLA Cataloging and Standardization Program or by contacting North American Rescue directly. MED-TAC International supports agency and government procurement inquiries.