In this deep-dive episode of the Prolonged Field Care Podcast, Dennis sits down with trauma and critical care surgeon Dr. John McClellan ( University of North Carolina) to cut through the noise on tranexamic acid (TXA) in trauma.
They cover the mechanism, who actually needs it, why the dosing shifted from 1g + drip to 2g upfront, pre-hospital decision-making when bleeding is controlled, redosing in ongoing hemorrhage, IM/IO options, seizure and hypotension concerns, the critical 3-hour window, and practical advice for the medic who is truly alone and afraid.
Whether you’re a combat medic, flight medic, or trauma provider, this conversation delivers actionable clarity on one of the most studied — and sometimes misunderstood — tools in hemorrhagic shock resuscitation.
Key Takeaways:
TXA is a lysine analog that reversibly (and at higher doses irreversibly) binds plasminogen, preventing its conversion to plasmin and stabilizing clots. It is one of the most evidence-backed hemorrhage adjuncts available.
The ideal candidate is any patient you suspect will trigger (or has triggered) a massive transfusion protocol — not just obvious amputations. Err on the side of giving it early in pre-hospital/austere settings to avoid missing occult bleeding.
Modern trauma practice favors 2g IV push upfront over the older CRASH-2 regimen of 1g bolus + 8-hour drip because traumatic bleeding is an acute event that needs rapid high plasma levels. The 8-hour drip was designed for elective surgical cases with ongoing bleeding over hours.
Overall safety is excellent. Large meta-analyses have not shown a clear increase in thrombotic events attributable to TXA. The bigger practical risks are seizures with doses significantly above 2g and accidental double-dosing due to poor handoff between pre-hospital and hospital teams.
Transient hypotension can occur with rapid push, but causality is murky — it is often impossible to separate from the patient’s underlying shock state.
Redosing is reasonable (another 1–2g) if significant re-bleeding causes hemodynamic instability. Roughly 25% of active TXA can be lost in major hemorrhage/transfusion models.
Give TXA within 3 hours of injury for maximum benefit. After 3 hours efficacy drops sharply and some data suggest potential increased bleeding risk.
For the solo medic: Preload if your protocol allows. Make TXA automatic once you have access (alongside calcium and blood products). Prioritize rapid transport. TCCC supports IM if no IV/IO is possible, though delivering the full 2g volume can be challenging.
Documentation and clear handoff are non-negotiable when pre-hospital TXA is given.
Chapters:
00:00 – Welcome & Podcast Disclaimer00:25 – Guest Introduction: Dr. John McClellan, Trauma Surgeon01:52 – What is TXA and How Does It Actually Work?03:28 – Who Should Get TXA? The Massive Transfusion Patient04:16 – Pre-Hospital TXA: Bleed Control First or TXA First?07:06 – Safety Concerns: Thrombosis, Seizures & Double Dosing Risks09:54 – Dosing Evolution: CRASH-2, 1g + Drip vs 2g Push in Trauma13:33 – Does TXA Cause Hypotension? Unpacking the Evidence19:12 – IO & IM TXA: Practical Routes When IV Access Is Tough21:46 – Redosing TXA in Ongoing Bleeding or Transport29:37 – Advice for the Medic Who Is Truly “Alone and Afraid”32:21 – The 3-Hour Rule: Why Timing Matters and What Happens After34:14 – Final Thoughts & Practical Takeaways from Dr. McClellan
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