Contact our office:

(503) 765-7615
logistics@crisis-medicine.com

Login
Crisis Medicine
  • Training
    • TCCC and TECC Concepts
    • Training for Law Enforcement
    • Training for Fire & EMS
    • Training for Private Citizens
    • Training for EDC
    • Training For Faith Communities
    • Training For Teachers
  • Courses
    • ONLINE TCCC & TECC Courses
    • In-Person Training Calendar
    • Preview Course
    • Course Overview By Skills
    • Student Reviews
  • Company
    • About Crisis Medicine
    • Agency Pricing
    • Contact
    • CM in the Media
    • Disclosures – None
    • Lessons Learned in Blood
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Learn
    • New
    • Quick Tips
    • MARCH
      • (S) Security & Awareness
      • (M) Massive Hemorrhage
      • (A) Airway
      • (R) Respiration
      • (C) Circulation
      • (H) Hypothermia Prevention
    • Everything Else
    • Equipment
    • Improvised
    • K9 TECC/TCCC
    • Air Travel Emergencies
    • Tactical CBRN
      • Tactical-CBRN Journal Watch
    • Planning Your IFAK
  • Store

(M) Massive Hemorrhage

a photo of Dr. Shertz kneeling in a groin crease to stop blood flow as proven by doppler ultrasound

Distal Hemorrhage Control: Can’t I just kneel on his groin?

  • Posted by Mike Shertz MD/18D
  • Categories (M) Massive Hemorrhage, Improvised

Kneeling on the casualty’s groin for distal hemorrhage control

🕖 Reading Time, 5 minutes

When I was in the Special Forces Medical Sergeants course a very long time ago, I was taught a stopgap measure for significant lower extremity / groin bleeding was to “drop your knee into his groin” to stop bleeding while preparing your equipment for tourniquet placement or wound packing.

During my time as an SF medic, I did that a few times.  Neither the casualties nor I found it to be a satisfying experience.  Rarely would a casualty lie still as you placed a huge portion of your body weight on their groin/inguinal area.  Instead, they would typically squirm and fight to get out from underneath your weight.  If the casualty won’t tolerate the procedure, you don’t have a chance of achieving hemorrhage control distally.

Many years later, in 2006 Dr. Blaivas published a, now much-quoted, ultrasound study1 looking at how much weight it took to compress your distal aorta and alternatively, the weight necessary to compress the inguinal arteries.  He placed incrementally heavier dumbbells (on end) over a towel folded to be about knee sized, either over the distal aorta (upper abdomen, proximal to the umbilicus) or right lower quadrant of the abdomen.  He then measured arterial flow on Doppler ultrasound at the common femoral artery.

a diagram of the pelvis showing the major vasculature including the iliac / femoral artery

Nine volunteers were used with a mean BMI of 27.  Flow “disappeared by 140 pounds in all volunteers” with aortic compression.  The range at which flow disappeared was 80 to 140 pounds.  The mean weight was 100 pounds.

No volunteer was able to tolerate enough weight to occlude flow through the distal iliac artery. One study participant tolerated a 100-pound dumbbell but still had flow.

Dr. Blaivas felt this disconnect in occlusion between the two locations was a byproduct of the distal aorta lying on top of the vertebral column, thus providing a firm backstop for aortic compression. , whereas the external iliac artery is posteriorly bordered by musculature making compression more difficult.

a diagram showing the inside of the right pelvic vasculature
View from inside the pelvis looking at the right “hip”. Note how the aorta and right common iliac artery are deep against the back of the pelvis . The external iliac moves forward to emerge out of the pelvis as the femoral artery. The femoral artery at its emergence lays on top of the anterior bony structures of the pelvis.

Since this study supported my own experience, I taught for years that kneeling on someone’s groin for distal hemorrhage control was primarily brought to you by the “good idea fairy.” An excellent idea that didn’t work well in the real world.  Then came the era of inexpensive Doppler ultrasound and our ability to conduct informal evaluations and testing.

My first Doppler proven success with groin vasculature compression came about when testing an improvised technique for junctional hemorrhage 2involving placing a helmet in the casualty’s groin and tightening it in place with two CAT tourniquets.  Surprisingly, it worked with either my Ops-Core helmet or the standard issue fire helmet of my Fire Department.  Next, we showed a 500 ml disposable water bottle3 also worked very well to stop distal blood flow when placed on the groin crease.  I rationalized this success with the Blaivas study and my own experience, presuming that the larger curvature of those items somehow facilitated vasculature compression that the human knee did not.

I then planned to kneel in groin creases at an in-person course to check if I could successfully compress the vasculature enough to occlude distal arterial flow and have the participant tolerate it.

With the Winter 2018 in-person Complete Tactical Casualty Care class, we used more than a dozen subjects and achieved 100% cessation of blood flow, thus success and tolerability as verified by Doppler. It was surprising how little pressure/body weight it actually took for compression. Further, when a knee was gently placed in the groin crease, blood flow stopped and the casualty tolerated the technique. Since that time, we’ve gone on to test this technique in in-person classes on over 200 students and achieved 100% success on Doppler.

This caused a serious disconnect between my prior experience, the literature, and my new findings. Reviewing the Blaivas paper again, I noted his unsuccessful external iliac artery compression was performed by placing the weight in the volunteer’s right lower abdomen; not specifically his groin crease.  Anatomically, the inguinal ligament is where the external iliac artery changes names and becomes the common femoral artery. It is the same piece of the vasculature, it just changes names once it leaves the abdomen.

The external iliac artery is buried deep in the pelvic brim until it surfaces and crosses underneath the inguinal ligament where it becomes the femoral artery.  Once past the inguinal ligament, it is generally palpable as the femoral pulse.

In discussions with Dr. Blaivis, he chose the right lower abdomen to attempt iliac artery compression because it would generally be protected by armor in tactical settings and thus remain uninjured providing a place to control bleeding proximal, or above the wound.

What we really want to know is not, can kneeling on the casualties groin occlude his iliac blood flow, but rather whether we can occlude blood flow distal to the inguinal ligament.

We can’t occlude iliac blood flow with direct pressure because that vasculature is too deep and laying on top of muscle. Dr. Blaivis’s work proves that. Additionally, trying to pack that artery injury will also generally be unsuccessful because it is an intraabdominal wound in a large pelvic bowl.  Wounds above the inguinal crease are in the torso and generally not packable without surgical exposure.

Putting on personal protection and getting a tourniquet out of your aid bag can seem like it takes forever when you are watching a casualty bleed. However, placing your knee gently in the casualties groin, below the inguinal ligament/groin crease of his trousers, works very well to compress distal flow through his common femoral artery as evidenced by the twelve students we tested it on in class.

SUMMARY: Putting your knee in a casualty’s groin can eliminate common femoral artery blood flow. The key is to place your knee gently in the groin crease, putting too much body weight into your knee will be painful to the casualty, and they will not remain underneath it.

References

1 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17334183Blaivas M, Control of hemorrhage in critical femoral or inguinal penetrating wounds—an ultrasound evaluation. Prehosp Disaster Med 2006 Nov-Dec; 21(c):379-82

2 See, Improvised Junctional Tourniquet video at the bottom of the list

Related:

Manual inguinal compression of the vasculature can work to occlude distal arterial blood flow.

Australian explanation of kneeling in the groin. "Shark attack? Push hard halfway between hips and bits"
Mike Shertz MD/18D

Dr. Mike Shertz is the Owner and Lead Instructor at Crisis Medicine. Dr. Shertz is a dual-boarded Emergency Medicine and EMS physician, having spent over 30 years gaining the experience and insight to create and provide his comprehensive, science-informed, training to better prepare everyday citizens, law enforcement, EMS, and the military to manage casualties and wounded in high-risk environments. Drawing on his prior experience as an Army Special Forces medic (18D), two decades as an armed, embedded tactical medic on a regional SWAT team, and as a Fire Service and EMS medical director.

Using a combination of current and historical events, Dr. Shertz’s lectures include relevant, illustrative photos, as well as hands-on demonstrations to demystify the how, why, when to use each emergency medical procedure you need to become a Force Multiplier for Good.

Previous post

Non-Rigid Litters

Next post

Seat of Your Pants Surgical Airway

You may also like

A throw down of the items necessary to turn MRE heaters into IV warmers: IV fluid, 2 MRE heaters, tape, and IV tubing coiled 7 times
From Meal to Medical Aid: Transforming MRE Heaters into IV Fluid Warmers
A woman places a tourniquet on a bleeding casualty's leg
How Misleading Data Could Change Tourniquet Protocols
21 of 24 tested STAT tourniquets failed as proven with doppler ultrasound
STAT Tourniquet: 21 of 24 applications FAIL

Featured Courses

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical Casualty Care – ONLINE

$150.00
Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

Advanced TC2 – ONLINE

$395.00
Complete TC2  -ONLINE

Complete TC2 -ONLINE

$595.00
Improvised TECC/TCCC

Improvised TECC/TCCC

$125.00
K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans  – ONLINE

K9 Tactical Casualty Care for Humans – ONLINE

$75.00
Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

Tactical CBRN Casualty Care – ONLINE

$225.00
First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

First Receivers – No Notice MCI Events – ONLINE

$175.00
Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

Air Travel Emergencies – ONLINE

$175.00
Sign up for updates
Our privacy policy can be found at https://www.crisis-medicine.com/privacy-policy/
Loading
Learn MoreTactical Casualty Care course

Search

The short version of the Crisis Medicine logo showing a C and M with an arrow in between the two

DUNS: 093140133

CAGE: 8U3A3

Company

  • About Us
  • Disclosures – None
  • Contributors
  • Contact

Courses

  • Online
  • In-Person
  • Content Warning
  • FAQs

Fine Print

  • Terms
  • Privacy Policy
  • Scope of Practice
  • FAQs

Resources

  • N. Amer. Rescue
  • TacMed Solutions
  • Chinook Medical
  • Skedco
  • Wound Cube

©2025 Crisis Medicine, all rights reserved.

  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Sitemap

Login with your site account

Lost your password?