Be patient.
Sure seals are really best for those who have a tendency to "spring a leak" after they get up and start moving around.
I think there may be a misunderstanding when it comes to the two minute part. The practitioner is to hold for 2 minutes until the sponge fills and expands and then the patient is suppose to hold until its done bleeding.From the PDF.6. The healthcare practitioner shouldcontinue to apply steady digitalpressure to the sponge for 1-2minutes as the sponge fills andexpands. The patient should thencontinue to apply digital pressure foran additional period of time until thehealthcare practitioner is convincedthat the bleeding is under control.The patient is not to leave thebandage on for over 8 hours.
They also told me that it had a clotting agent in it to help stop the bleeding.
Yeah a patient patient must have patience.
Quote from: Dan.Larrabee on April 26, 2009, 01:50:04 AMThey also told me that it had a clotting agent in it to help stop the bleeding. That was the big myth going around for many years.I'm not 'sure' how it started, but the story went that the sponge was made of gelfoam.What is gelfoam? Very expensive stuff, but it truly clots the sites.http://www.rxmed.com/b.main/b2.pharmaceutical/b2.1.monographs/CPS-%20Monographs/CPS-%20(General%20Monographs-%20G)/GELFOAM.html