Back to Top Skip to main content

Health.mil: the official website of the Military Health System (MHS) and the Defense Health Agency (DHA)

Utility Navigation Links

Social Media Links

Tiny life-saving device receives FDA clearance

U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research senior scientist, Victor Convertino, Ph.D. (right), demonstrates the functions and capabilities of the Compensatory Reserve Index to Army Maj. Gen. Barbara Holcomb, commanding general, U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command. (U.S. Army photo by Steven Galvan) U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research senior scientist, Victor Convertino, Ph.D. (right), demonstrates the functions and capabilities of the Compensatory Reserve Index to Army Maj. Gen. Barbara Holcomb, commanding general, U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command. (U.S. Army photo by Steven Galvan)

Recommended Content:

Research and Innovation | Technology

FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas — The ability to measure the body's capacity to compensate for blood loss – also known as the compensatory reserve – has been the focus of researchers at the U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, for years. Hemorrhagic shock from blood loss is the leading cause of death in trauma patients. Traditional methods of taking vital signs does not detect when a patient is on the verge of crashing or going into hemorrhagic shock and potentially dying from blood loss. 

With that in mind, USAISR researchers collaborated with scientists and engineers at the University of Colorado and Flashback Technologies, Inc., to develop an algorithm, the Compensatory Reserve Index (CRI), to detect when a patient is going into hemorrhagic shock. The tiny device is the first medical monitoring technology capable of providing early detection of impending circulatory shock in trauma patients and received clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in December 2016 to be used in pre-hospital and hospital settings.

"Our research has revealed that the measurement of the compensatory reserve is the single most important indicator for early and accurate assessment of imminent shock because it represents the body's ability to adjust for the threat of inadequate oxygen in the tissues due to blood loss" said Dr. Victor Convertino, USAISR senior scientist for the U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Combat Casualty Care Research Program, which funded the research.

The CRI uses an algorithm to take information from a standard pulse oximeter placed on the finger of a patient and gauges whether a patient requires resuscitation or immediate medical attention. Equipped with a gauge similar to a fuel gauge in a motor vehicle, the device detects when a patient is in danger of crashing or going into hemorrhagic shock. This technology will be beneficial for medics who don't have much experience in the battlefield to care for Wounded Warriors needing immediate medical attention.

"FDA clearance is a significant milestone because it paves the way for fielding a compensatory reserve measurement device to give combat medics on the battlefield a tool to predict hemorrhagic shock, as well as emergency medical technicians in civilian medical settings," said Convertino. "The ability to measure the compensatory reserve continuously and in real time will revolutionize medical monitoring from early diagnosis of the trajectory toward shock to accurately guiding fluid resuscitation or providing feedback of intervention effectiveness." 

Convertino and his team were able to use the compensatory reserve algorithm to learn from an individual's own arterial waveform how the body is using its compensatory mechanisms. The research team learned that waveforms obtained from a simple pulse oximeter that is carried by combat medics could be used to generate a compensatory reserve measurement device. 

"With newly advanced computer technologies, we now have the capability to measure features of each arterial waveform that reflect the sum of all mechanisms of compensation that affect the heart (ejected wave) and the arteries (reflected wave)," said Convertino. 

With analysis of each arterial waveform, the algorithm becomes more accurate in predicting the body's ability to protect itself from inadequate tissue oxygenation (shock) or begin to decompensate.

"The compensatory reserve measurement device will be important for triage because of stressful battlefield conditions," said Convertino. "There's lots of noise, lots of adrenaline and not much equipment, which can make diagnosis especially hard for medics on the battlefield. This device will help medics save lives on the battlefield."

You also may be interested in...

Showing results 16 - 30 Page 2 of 15

Virtual health extends Army Medicine reach

Article
11/21/2016
Army Lt. Col. Robert Cornfeld, Pediatric Gastroenterologist at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, conducts the first in-home virtual health visit within Regional Health Command Europe. In-home virtual health provides patients with the option to conduct a doctor's visit without having to go into a clinic. (U.S. Army photo by Ashley Patoka)

In-home virtual health provides patients with the option to conduct a doctor's visit without having to go into a clinic

Recommended Content:

Access to Health Care | Military Hospitals and Clinics | Innovation | Technology

The future of intensive care: Tele-ICU

Article
11/7/2016
United States Air Force Medical Service Seal

The Mike O’Callaghan Federal Medical Center partners with Veteran Affairs to bring the first Tele-ICU to the Critical Care Unit, improving the quality of patient care

Recommended Content:

Access to Health Care | Military Hospitals and Clinics | DoD/VA Sharing Initiatives | Quality and Safety of Health Care | Technology

Classifying the Histomorphology of Prostatic Adenocarcinoma with Deep Neural Networks

Presentation
11/1/2016

Classifying the Histomorphology of Prostatic Adenocarcinoma with Deep Neural Networks

Recommended Content:

Research and Innovation | Technology

Improving Defense Health Program Medical Research Processes

Presentation
11/1/2016

Improving Defense Health Program Medical Research Processes briefing to the Defense Health Board, Nov. 1, 2016.

Recommended Content:

Research and Innovation

Mechanical Ventilation Methods in Transport of Critically Injured Patients

Presentation
11/1/2016

Mechanical Ventilation Methods in Transport of Critically Injured Patients

Recommended Content:

Access, Cost, Quality, and Safety | Research and Innovation

Air Force's first robotic surgery training course established at Keesler

Article
10/31/2016
The Keesler Medical Center recently acquired two da Vinci Xis, which are the newest robotic surgical systems available. One surgical robot is set up as part of the Institute for Defense Robotic Surgical Education to assist surgeons in getting their official robotic surgery credentials. (Courtesy photo)

Keesler Air Force Base surgeons are forging a new path in military medicine by being the first in the Air Force to use one of the most advanced robotic surgery systems available

Recommended Content:

Technology | Military Hospitals and Clinics

Genome Center tracking and sequencing - making a difference in health care

Article
10/28/2016
Nathan Watt, a research associate at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, closely monitors data on a next-generation sequencer in The American Genome Center at the university. This sequencing helps pinpoint genetic mutations that could serve as biomarkers, which can better predict disease risks and outcomes. TAGC is one of four academic genome centers in the U.S. and the only genome center in the federal system.  (DoD photo by Sarah Marshall)

The American Genome Center at USU aims to study large populations by quickly sequencing thousands of genomes

Recommended Content:

Medical Research and Development | Technology

Military researchers making progress in medical simulation

Article
10/27/2016
A soldier applies a tourniquet to a simulated casualty during a training exercise. (Courtesy photo)

A recent research review highlighted several bright spots for the future of military medicine

Recommended Content:

Health Readiness | Technology | MHS GENESIS

Virtual medicine will be norm in future crises, says health chief

Article
10/25/2016
In a demonstration of the telehealth process at Fort Campbell’s Blanchfield Army Community Hospital, clinical staff nurse Army Lt. Maxx P. Mamula examines mock patient Army Master Sgt. Jason H. Alexander using a digital external ocular camera.

The future battlespace may be contested to such a degree that medevacs may be impossible and field hospitals, much less forward operating bases, may not be located nearby

Recommended Content:

Access to Health Care | Military Hospitals and Clinics | Technology

MHS GENESIS Brand Style Guide, Version 11.0

Publication
10/20/2016

The purpose of this style guide is to establish the MHS GENESIS brand guidelines and educate its users to observe the brand standards. Branding is a key supporting element for communication, training and deployment activities.

Recommended Content:

Military Health System Electronic Health Record | Technology | MHS GENESIS Branding

Bono to AFCEA: New electronic health record is key for future of engaging military health patients

Article
10/14/2016
Navy Vice Adm. Raquel Bono, director of the Defense Health Agency, said military members have to be ready to go anywhere in the world on short notice. To help solve the complexity of care with that readiness aspect, Bono pointed to the Military Health System’s new electronic health record, MHS GENESIS, as key to helping conversations between doctors and patients, no matter where people are. (Courtesy photo)

Navy Vice Adm. Raquel Bono, director of the Defense Health Agency, spoke at the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association’s Health IT Day 2016, a gathering of approximately 1,000 federal government workers, including the Departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs, and Health and Human Services, as well as private IT industry representatives.

Recommended Content:

Technology | Military Health System Electronic Health Record | MHS GENESIS

Office of Naval Research developing new ways to protect injured limbs

Article
10/6/2016
Office of Naval Research Logo

The Office of Naval Research is sponsoring work to develop a breakthrough medical wrap, that will not only cover injured limbs, but also mitigate damage and protect tissue for up to three days

Recommended Content:

Research and Innovation | Medical Research and Development

General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital demonstrates new era of virtual Army Medicine

Article
9/8/2016
Sonja Lawson, a registered nurse at Baptist Health hospital in Little Rock, Arkansas, waves at the monitor to Kristen Davis and Thomas Hedrick, registered nurses in General Leonard Wood Army Community Hospital's Intensive Care Unit.

The eICU is a safe, highly integrated and choreographed system that establishes a long-distance, high-functioning and secure telemedicine connection

Recommended Content:

Technology

Naval Medical Center Portsmouth's simulation center celebrates 10 years of training

Article
9/7/2016
Patrick Gravel speaks to visitors about the combat simulators that train healthcare providers to respond to battlefield trauma. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Rebecca Perron)

The Healthcare Simulation and Bioskills Training Center at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth celebrated their 10th anniversary

Recommended Content:

Technology

MHS officials delay MHS GENESIS release to improve user experience

Article
9/6/2016
Genesis Logo

Military Health System officials cited an aggressive schedule and a need to ensure best solution for a slight delay in the rollout of MHS GENESIS

Recommended Content:

Technology | Military Health System Electronic Health Record | MHS GENESIS | Electronic Health Record Modernization & Interoperability
<< < 1 2 3 4 5  ... > >> 
Showing results 16 - 30 Page 2 of 15

DHA Address: 7700 Arlington Boulevard | Suite 5101 | Falls Church, VA | 22042-5101

Some documents are presented in Portable Document Format (PDF). A PDF reader is required for viewing. Download a PDF Reader or learn more about PDFs.