HOSPITAL & TRAUMA
FROM ARRIVAL TO
SURGICAL INTERVENTION
The AAJT-S provides an external, non-invasive option to control hemorrhage in the abdomen, pelvis, and junctional regions — to conserve blood products and stabilize your patient for definitive care.
Segment-Relevant Use Cases
Catastrophic Blunt Pelvic Trauma
A patient suffered catastrophic blunt pelvic trauma resulting in hemorrhagic shock. BP 70/30, HR 148, with continued deterioration despite massive blood transfusion
Female Uterine Rupture
One week post-op, a patient presented with pelvic pain then rapid onset of bleeding, losing 2 liters of blood and consciousness within minutes.
GSW to the Axilla
A patient arrived unconscious with a gunshot wound through the left axilla, no measurable vital signs, and a thready pulse.
Motorcycle Accident
A patient sustained a pelvic fracture, hip dislocation, lacerated liver, and lacerated spleen following a motorcycle accident. Arrived in hemorrhagic shock with SBP in the 70s, unresponsive to transfusion.
GSWs to the Legs and Groin
Three gunshot wounds to the lower extremities, including a proximal thigh injury with profuse bleeding inaccessible to a peripheral tourniquet.
AAJT-S is cleared by the FDA for select indications. Case reports, studies, or protocols shared here may describe non-indicated uses and should not be interpreted as FDA-cleared indications.
Massive Hemorrhage Protocol
Example
Standardized application across all placements, excluding pelvic fracture stabilization. Designed for integration into trauma workflows, resuscitation protocols, and multidisciplinary care teams.
Request Clinical Resources
Train-the-trainer guides & hospital protocol integration examples.
Earned on the call
Recognizing first responders who applied the device in real-world incidents—honoring action taken in critical moments.
Get it on your rig
We work directly with departments to support evaluation, training, and integration into existing EMS response systems.
In Clinical Use
“The AAJT-S represents a novel application for postpartum hemorrhage. Its portability and ease of use make it an invaluable tool in unstable, low-resource settings—giving us the most precious resource: time.”
