Tiny balloon catheter stops bleeding, has life-saving impact in trauma patients
TORONTO — By the time Gaven Mayo got to a Montreal hospital after a bullet from a high-powered rifle ripped through his thigh, he had lost a massive amount of blood and by his own account was hovering between life and death.
But the 27-year-old from the Kahnawake First Nation attributes the fact that he didn’t die to a simple device that can immediately arrest severe bleeding, giving surgeons time to repair the damage from traumatic injuries and saving lives that otherwise might have been lost.
“On the way to the hospital, I was still basically losing blood the whole way,” he said Wednesday from his bed at McGill University Health Centre, where he has been recovering for the last six weeks while waiting for transfer to a rehabilitation centre. “After I arrived at the hospital, they said I had lost about 80 per cent of my blood.”
Mayo declined to talk about how he got shot, but said the bullet passed through his leg, breaking his femur and ripping into his femoral artery — the major blood vessel in the leg.

