What is the TacMed BLAST Combat Wound Bandage designed to treat?
The TacMed™ BLAST® Combat Wound Bandage by Tactical Medical Solutions is purpose-built for traumatic amputations, large-pattern blast wounds, abdominal injuries, and severe burns — the wound types that define IED and explosive trauma. Its 20" × 20" deployed treatment area is large enough to cover the entire back or chest of most casualties, or wrap fully around an amputated limb with room to build pressure. Standard 4" or 6" combat bandages lack the surface area to adequately address these wound profiles; the BLAST® solves this with a compact-packed large-format dressing that requires no additional improvisation.
How large is the BLAST Bandage when packed, and how does the deployed area compare?
When packaged, the BLAST® measures 4" H × 7" W × 2.5" D at 3.8 oz — the same footprint as a standard 4" combat bandage. When deployed, the non-adherent wound pad expands to a 20" × 20" treatment area (approximately 50.8 cm × 50.8 cm), and the removable occlusive layer covers 19" × 19". This ratio of deployed coverage to packed size is unmatched in the category. The compact packing means the BLAST® can be carried in any IFAK or trauma kit designed for standard combat bandages without requiring additional storage space.
What is the removable occlusive layer inside the BLAST Bandage used for?
The 19" × 19" occlusive layer stored within the BLAST® packaging serves two primary secondary functions: for abdominal evisceration wounds, it is applied directly over exposed abdominal contents (without attempting to replace them) to retain heat and moisture, preventing tissue desiccation and hypothermia onset during evacuation. For burns, the occlusive layer is applied as a moisture-retaining burn dressing to minimize transdermal fluid loss from large burned surfaces. The dual-use nature of this layer makes the BLAST® the correct primary bandage for blast trauma kits where the wound profile is unpredictable.
How do the control-strip brakes assist with amputation dressing?
Wrapping an amputated limb stump is uniquely challenging because the irregular, bleeding surface lacks a consistent circumference for elastic bandage tension. Standard elastic bandages slip and unroll on these surfaces, requiring a second responder to hold tension while the first applies the dressing. The BLAST®'s control-strip brakes — built into the elastic wrap at intervals — create multiple adhesion points along the wrap length, preventing slippage and enabling single-provider application to an irregular stump without assistance. This is a critical operational capability in trauma scenarios where providers are outnumbered by casualties.
In what TCCC scenarios should the BLAST Bandage be chosen over a standard OLAES or Israeli bandage?
The BLAST® should be chosen when the wound is large enough that standard 4" or 6" dressings cannot provide adequate pad coverage — specifically for traumatic amputations above the knee or elbow, IED blast wounds with wide fragment dispersal across the back or torso, large open abdominal injuries, and severe thermal burns covering a significant body surface area. The OLAES® Modular Bandage and Israeli Emergency Bandage are the correct tools for discrete penetrating wounds, wound packing, and moderate-area pressure dressings. The BLAST® fills the clinical gap for large-format coverage scenarios where wound surface area exceeds what those platforms can address.
What is the difference between the BLAST Bandage and the OLAES Modular Bandage?
The OLAES Modular Bandage is the correct choice for discrete penetrating wounds, wound packing, and moderate-area pressure dressings — it includes a built-in pressure plate and occlusive component. The BLAST Bandage fills the gap for large-format coverage: its 20 inch by 20 inch wound pad addresses traumatic amputations, IED blast wounds with wide fragment dispersal, large open abdominal injuries, and severe burns covering significant body surface area — wound profiles that exceed the coverage area of even the 6-inch OLAES.
Does the BLAST Bandage require the occlusive layer to be used with every application?
No. The 19 inch by 19 inch occlusive layer is removable and stored separately within the BLAST packaging. It is used selectively for abdominal evisceration wounds (applied without replacing displaced viscera) and large burn wounds. For traumatic amputations and standard blast wound wrapping, the occlusive layer is typically not applied, and the non-adherent wound pad with elastic wrap handles the dressing task.
How does the BLAST Bandage control-strip brake system improve single-provider application?
Wrapping an amputated limb stump requires the bandage to hold position across an irregular, blood-contaminated surface with no consistent circumference — a task standard elastic bandages consistently fail under stress because they slip and unroll. The BLAST's brake strips, built into the elastic wrap at intervals, create multiple adhesion points that prevent slippage and enable single-provider application without requiring a second responder to hold the dressing in position.