Tactical Trauma Exposure Pattern (TACMED 2026)
DrRamonReyesMD
High-Resolution Anatomical Educational Infographic
Tactical Trauma Exposure Pattern (TACMED 2026)
DrRamonReyesMD – TACMED 2026
📌 Overall Composition
The image is a high-resolution anatomical educational infographic designed in a medical atlas style, with a didactic focus on systematic tactical trauma exposure.
- Neutral light gray background resembling a clinical atlas plate.
- Male human figure in supine position (dorsal decubitus).
- Tactical uniform partially opened.
- Full frontal anatomical view.
- Hyperrealistic yet clean presentation (no gore).
- High-contrast red dashed cut lines.
- Minimalist, professional technical labeling.
- Signature at the bottom: DrRamonReyesMD – TACMED 2026.
The visual tone communicates anatomical precision, operational clarity, and instructional intent.
🔴 Represented Cut Lines
1️⃣ Bilateral Lower Extremity Cuts
Two longitudinal red dashed lines:
- Begin at the dorsal aspect of the right and left foot.
- Ascend along the anterior or slightly anterolateral surface of each leg.
- Continue proximally to the inguinal region.
- Include belt sectioning if necessary.
Visually, these cuts create a symmetrical opening, allowing the trousers to unfold laterally like two anterior flaps.
This configuration enables full exposure of:
- Femoral region
- Proximal thigh
- Potential concealed hemorrhage sites
2️⃣ Anterior Midline Cut
One vertical red dashed line:
- Begins at the suprapubic region.
- Extends upward along the abdominal midline.
- Continues to the sternal notch (suprasternal notch).
This cut allows complete exposure of:
- Abdomen
- Epigastric region
- Anterior thorax
It facilitates rapid inspection for:
- Penetrating injuries
- Thoracic compromise
- Abdominal hemorrhage
3️⃣ Upper Extremity Cuts
Two longitudinal lines on both arms:
- Begin at the wrist.
- Travel proximally along the medial or slightly posterior surface.
- Terminate at the shoulder region.
This enables full exposure of:
- Brachial region
- Potential arterial injury
- Hidden extremity hemorrhage
🧠 Highlighted Anatomical Landmarks
The figure clearly preserves visible reference points for:
- Inguinal crease
- Proximal femoral region
- Abdominal midline
- Sternal notch
- Brachial trajectory
The cut lines respect safe anatomical planes for trauma shears, avoiding direct genital cutting paths or superficial critical structures.
🎯 Didactic Purpose
The image illustrates the concept of:
Systematic full-body exposure in tactical trauma.
This is not random garment cutting.
It represents a structured exposure pattern designed to:
- Control massive hemorrhage (MARCH algorithm)
- Achieve rapid visualization
- Minimize time loss
- Provide proximal anatomical access
The exposure strategy reflects doctrinal logic rather than improvisation.


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