| Literature DB >> 33209504 |
Yann Delannoy1,2, Isabelle Plu1,3, Isabelle Sec1,4, Tania Delabarde1,5, Marc Taccoen1, Antoine Tracqui6, Bertrand Ludes1,5.
Abstract
Terrorist attacks have been on the rise. During the recent terrorist attacks in France, terrorists perpetrated their acts using weapons of war, as well as explosive charges. These two modes of action, when combined, can create skin lesions with similar macroscopic appearances, which can sometimes go unnoticed because of body fragmentation. A total of 68 autopsies, 83 external examinations, 140 standard radiographic examinations, and 49 computed tomography (CT) scans were performed over 7 days during the 2015 terrorist attacks in France. Bodies were injured by firearms and shrapnel-like projectiles. We analysed the clinical findings for the secondary blast cutaneous lesions from the explosive devices and compared these lesions with ballistic-related lesions to highlight that patterns can be macroscopically similar on external examination. Secondary blast injuries are characterised by penetrating trauma associated with materials added to explosive systems that are propelled by explosive air movement. These injuries are caused most often by small, shrapnel-like metallic objects, such as nails and bolts. Propulsion causes ballistic-type injuries that must be recognised and distinguished from those caused by firearm projectiles. Differentiating between these lesions is very difficult when using conventional criteria (size, shape, number and distribution on the body) with only external examination of corpses. This is why the particularities of these lesions must be further illustrated and then confirmed by complete autopsies and radiological and anatomopathological examinations.Key pointsWhen occurring simultaneously in terrorist attacks, injuries caused by secondary blasts appear as cutaneous wound patterns that can be macroscopically very similar to those caused by firearm projectiles.The criteria usually found in the literature for distinguishing these two types of projectiles may be difficult to use.It is important in these difficult situations to benefit from systematic postmortem imaging.Systematic autopsy and then anatomopathological analyses of the orifices also help determine the cause of the wounds.Entities:
Keywords: Forensic sciences; blast injuries; explosive agents; forensic medicine; gunshot wounds; suicide
Year: 2020 PMID: 33209504 PMCID: PMC7646566 DOI: 10.1080/20961790.2020.1771859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Forensic Sci Res ISSN: 2471-1411
Figure 1.Photograph showing a projectile that had impacted intermediate obstacles before skin entrance (B), and the resulting irregularly-shaped skin wound (A).
Figure 2.Photograph showing an irregularly-shaped skin wound (A) caused by shrapnel-like projectiles (nuts) (B) found near the shallow orifice.
Figure 3.Photographs of representative ballistic entrance wounds. The projectile penetrated the skin laterally (A and C). The projectile penetrated the skin without deformation (B) and a deformed projectile penetrated the skin, causing an irregularly-shaped wound (D).
Figure 4.Photograph showing deformed projectiles that encountered multiple intermediate obstacles before penetrating the body. Full metal-jacketed bullet (A). Flattened bullet (B). Deformed jacket without core (C) and core without jacket (D).
Figure 5.Photograph showing numerous skin wounds caused by blunt impacts with disruption and penetrating soft tissue wounds on a victim’s upper limbs (A and C), with multi-fragmentation associated fractures visible in the X-ray image (B).
Figure 6.shrapnel-like injury isolated on the body.
Classification and types of blast injuries [6–8].
| Classification of blast injuries | Types of blast injuries |
|---|---|
| Primary blast injury | Injuries caused by blast wave through human tissues of varying densities |
| Secondary blast injury | Injuries caused by blast wind that turns various objects into penetrating or blunt body projectiles |
| Tertiary blast injury | Projection of the whole body by the blast wind against its environment or crushing (collapse) of the environment on the body |
| Quaternary blast injury | Other non-specific injuries |
Figure 7.Microscopical aspects of these shrapnel-like injuries. The origin of the wounds is distinguished by the presence (A) or absence (B) of gun powder particles (hematein stain combined with an aluminum mordant, ×100).