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by jdeibele
234 days ago
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I was curious about that myself. "To slow absorption of injected antigens (e.g., insect stings), a tourniquet may be placed proximal to the injection site. " https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2003/1001/p1325.html The article says that tourniquets are no longer recommended. It doesn't seem like a tourniquet would be of any help if you ingested something but reasonable for insect stings. Anyone who has taken a first aid course gets warned multiple times about the danger of leaving a tourniquet on too long but maybe random people aren't aware of it. |
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