External Aortic Compression Device


Medical equipment data
Health topic Maternal mortality
Health classification Treatment


Project data
Type
Authors
Location Egypt
Status Clinical trial
Years
Made No
Replicated No

Problem being addressed

Post-partum hemorrhage is the cause for 8% of direct pregnancy-related deaths in industrialized countries and 25% of maternal deaths in the developing world. In trauma patients, hemorrhagic shock is the second most frequent cause of death.

Detailed description of the solution

The external aortic compression device, also known as the EACD, consists of a strong metal spring, cylindrical in shape, covered with leather. It has a height of 12 cm (5 cm when compressed), diameter of 8 cm, and a net surface area of 22.3 cm2. It is fixed in place by a leather belt wrapped around the waist. When not in use, it is held compressed and fixed with Velcro™ straps. When the straps are released the spring will open and the desired pressure (103.5 mm Hg/cm2 (30 kg)) on the abdominal wall is achieved in order to stop bleeding.

Designed by

  • Designed by:

Dr. Soltan from the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine, Minia

  • Manufacturer (if different):
  • Manufacturer location:

When and where it was tested/implemented

Funding Source

References

Peer-reviewed publication

Other internally generated reports

Soltan, M.H., et al., External aortic compression device: The first aid for postpartum hemorrhage control. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research, 2009. 35(3): p. 453-458.

Externally generated reports

IP and copyright

Approval by regulatory bodies or standards boards

Page data
Authors Tessa Adzemovic
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Cite as Tessa Adzemovic (2012–2022). "External Aortic Compression Device". Appropedia. Retrieved November 28, 2025.