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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Autoinjector-based delivery of tranexamic acid provides pharmacokinetic efficacy in a porcine model of uncontrolled hemorrhage.

Journal:
Injury
Year:
2026
Authors:
Eisenkraft, Arik et al.
Affiliation:
Institute for Research in Military Medicine (IRMM)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hemorrhage remains the principal cause of death on the battlefield. It is suggested that Tranexamic acid (TXA) can improve survival of severely-bleeding casualties. The intravenous approach is not always available in the pre-hospital setting. It was shown that for every 15 min delay, the efficiency of TXA decreases by 10 %. This study was designed to assess the pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and pre-clinical efficacy of a TXA autoinjector in uncontrolled hemorrhage in swine. METHODS: Non-compressible hemorrhage was induced by laparoscopic partial liver resection. TXA was administered intramuscularly by autoinjector (n = 25) or intravenously (control, n = 5). Blood levels of TXA and dynamics of clot formation were determined. Euthanasia was performed ninety minutes after injury followed by a laparotomy for the measurement of free blood and clots in the abdomen. RESULTS: The TXA levels in the autoinjector group exceeded the effective therapeutic threshold within <5 min and remained above the 10 mg/L threshold throughout the experiment. Intra-abdominal blood volumes, hemodynamic parameters, and indices of clot formation were similar between autoinjector-delivered and intravenouslyadministered groups. CONCLUSIONS: Autoinjector-based TXA provides sustained, anti-fibrinolytic levels within 2-5 min of administration in a swine model of uncontrolled hemorrhage emphasizing its important.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40915868/