| Literature DB >> 20565804 |
Philipp Lichte1, Reiner Oberbeck, Marcel Binnebösel, Rene Wildenauer, Hans-Christoph Pape, Philipp Kobbe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gun violence is on the rise in some European countries, however most of the literature on gunshot injuries pertains to military weaponry and is difficult to apply to civilians, due to dissimilarities in wound contamination and wounding potential of firearms and ammunition. Gunshot injuries in civilians have more focal injury patterns and should be considered distinct entities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20565804 PMCID: PMC2898680 DOI: 10.1186/1757-7241-18-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Figure 1The mechanism of cavitation can cause tissue destruction along the bullet diameter.
Design and effects of different types of bullets [13].
| Full Metal Jacket ammunition | A metal casing around a lead core | These bullets are dimensionally stable and produce non-expanding and deep penetrating wounds. |
|---|---|---|
| Jacket Hollow Point ammunition | Bullets with an exposed, hollowed lead tip which allows expansion on the impact. | Tissue penetration is less deeply than in Full Metal Jacket ammunition but more energy is transferred to the tissue. |
| Soft Point ammunition | An exposed lead tip causes a rapid expansion of the bullet on impact at lower velocities. | This rapid expansion is responsible for wounds which are significant wider than the diameter of the bullet. |
| Altered ammunition | Ammunition can be altered to increase the severity of injury. An infamous example is the Dum Dum projectile, produced by cutting a cross in the soft lead tip of the bullet. | This modification ensures that the bullet will fragment at the impact. Dum dum projectiles are responsible for very high energy transfer to the tissue and therefore tall inner wounds. They are banned for usage in war by an amendment of the Geneva Convention. |
Figure 2CT-scan of a lethal gunshot injury of the brain with massive swelling and increased pressure despite of craniotomie. The patient died despite of immediate craniotomie.
Figure 3Bilateral chest tubes have been inserted after gunshot injury. The bilateral haematopneumothrax have been drained sufficient.
Figure 4CT-scan: Spinal gunshot with destruction of the spinal cord. These injury caused a complete paraplegia and an unstable fracture of the vertebra.