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APPENDIX
Biomechanics of Injury
INTRODUCTION
The details of the injury event can provide clues to the identification of 90% of a patients injuries. Important information begins with details of events in the preinjury phase, eg, alcohol or other drug ingestion, seizure activity, chest pain, loss of consciousness before impact. History related to this phase should include: 1. The type of traumatic event, eg, vehicular collision, fall, penetrating injury 2. An estimation of the amount of energy exchange that occurred, eg, speed of the vehicle at impact, distance of the fall, and caliber and size of the weapon 3. The collision or impact of the patient with the object, eg, car, tree, knife, baseball bat, bullet Mechanisms of injury may be classified as blunt, penetrating, thermal, and blast. In all cases, there is a transfer of energy to tissue, or in the case of freezing, a transfer of energy (heat) from tissue. Energy laws assist with an understanding of how tissues sustain injury. These include: 1. Energy is neither created nor destroyed; however, it can be changed in form. 2. A body in motion or a body at rest tends to remain in that state until acted on by an outside force. 3. Kinetic energy (KE) is equal to the mass (m) of the object in motion multiplied by the square of the velocity (v) and divided by two. KE = (m)(v2) 2 4. Force (F) is equal to the mass times deceleration (acceleration). 5. Injury is dependent upon the amount and speed of energy transmission, the surface area over which the energy is applied, and the elastic properties of the tissues to which the energy transfer is applied. A definition of terms used in this section is necessary to avoid confusion. Acceleration (a) is the change in velocity with respect to time. This is expressed as feet per second per second or meters per second per second. An object being pulled toward the earth would accelerate at 32.1 feet (9.81 meters) per second per second if there were no forces acting in the opposite direction. Force (F) is the push or pull of one object on another, although the two do not necessarily have to be in contact. Force is the acceleration, or change in state of motion, that one object would impart to a given mass. (See the aforementioned energy law and formula #4.) Weight is an example of a specific force. A load refers to a force applied to a body or structure. The Newton (1 kg m1 sec 2) or dyne (1 g cm1 sec2) are the common units used to describe force. Advanced Trauma Life Support
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APPENDIX 3
Mass (m) describes the inertial quality of matter, which is the inherent property of matter to resist a change in its state of motion. The greater the mass, the greater the inertia. Mass should not be confused with force or weight and only describes the amount of material. Strain is defined as the internal deformation or change in dimension (relative to its original dimension) as the result of a force. Stress can be considered the internal resistance (or opposite forces) that resists the deformation of a body. If the external forces exceed the internal forces that resist deformation, equilibrium is lost. Stress is expressed as force per unit area (Newton m2 or pounds in2). Weight describes the rate at which any given body is attracted toward the center of a gravitational body, such as the earth. Since a 70-kg person standing on the ground is not accelerating toward the center of the earth, an opposite force (the ground) holds the person up. This force in the opposite direction is denoted as weight. Velocity (v) is the change in distance with respect to time, eg, miles or kilometers per hour, feet per second, etc.
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FIGURE 1 Cavitation
in the glove stretched longitudinally are under uniaxial stress and only those chains are disrupted. Frequently, dull scissors have difficulty cutting suture unless the suture is placed under some tension. The force applied to the relaxed suture is only the shear force applied by the scissors, whereas the total force in the taut suture is the sum of initial stress plus the shear forces. Numerous clinical examples should come to mind. The suture is similar to blood vessels or ligaments. Many organs, such as the heart, liver, diaphragm, and urinary bladder, are subjected to multi-axial forces, accounting for the burst injuries commonly seen in clinical practice.
II. HISTORY
Information obtained from prehospital personnel related to a vehicles interior and exterior damage frequently provides clues to injuries sustained by its occupants. Prehospital personnel are trained to make such observations, and this information facilitates the suspicion and subsequent identification of occult injuries. A bent steering wheel usually indicates chest impact. This should alert the
doctor to the possibility of injury to the anterior bony thorax and mediastinal organs, in addition to pulmonary parenchymal injury. Rapid deceleration from a high-speed vehicular crash, significant compression of the passenger compartment, a bent steering wheel, and an indistinct aortic arch shadow should lead to the aggressive exclusion of a thoracic aortic injury. A bulls-eye break of the windscreen usually indicated impact with the individuals head and the possibility of cervical spine injury. An indentation in the lower dashboard indicated a knee impact and the possibility of dislocation of the knee or hip or a femur fracture. Lateral intrusion into the passenger compartment suggests the potential for lateral injury to the patients chest, abdomen, pelvis, or neck. Additionally, historical information about the injury-producing event can suggest the need for surgical intervention. Penetrating injury to the trunk from which the patient rapidly becomes hypotensive usually indicates major vascular injury and the need for prompt surgical intervention. Patients with head injuries as the result of causes other than vehicular crashes and who have focal abnormalities or asymmetry by neurologic examination have a high American College of Surgeons
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A. Vehicular Impact
Vehicular collisions can be subdivided further into (1) collision between the patient and the vehicle, or between patient and some stationary object outside the vehicle if the patient is ejected (eg, tree, earth), and (2) the collision between the patients organ(s) and the external framework of the body (organ compression). The interactions between the patient and the vehicle depend on the type of crash. Five crashes depict the possible scenariosfrontal, lateral, rear, angular (front quarter or rear quarter), and rollover.
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of energy may produce direct or shear forces to brain tissue, rotational, flexion, or extension forces to the cervical spine, as well as direct compressive forces to facial structures. Lacerations to soft tissues from broken components of the vehicle also can occur.
b. Lateral impact
Lateral impact is defined as a collision against the side of a vehicle that accelerates the occupant away from the point of impact (acceleration as opposed to deceleration). This type of impact is second only to frontal impact in terms of injury and fatality. As much as 31% of all automobile crash fatalities occur as the result of lateral impact. Interestingly, more than 75% of victims of side impacts are over the age of 50 years, whereas 25% of victims involved in frontal impacts are over 50 years. Many of the same types of injuries occur as with a frontal
impact. Additionally, compression injuries to the torso and pelvis may occur. Internal injuries are related to the side on which the force was applied, the position of the occupant (driver or passenger), and the force of impact and the time over which the force was applied (intrusion of the passenger cabin). The driver who is struck on the drivers side is at greater risk for left-sided injuries, including left rib fractures, left-sided pulmonary injury, splenic injury, and left-sided skeletal fractures, including pelvic compression fractures. A passenger struck on the passenger side of the vehicle may experience similar right-sided skeletal and thoracic injuries, with liver injuries being common. In lateral impacts, the head acts as a large mass that rotates and laterally bends the neck as the torso is accelerated away from the side of the collision. Injury mechanisms, therefore, American College of Surgeons
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c. Rear impact
Rear impact involves different biomechanical properties. More commonly, this type of impact occurs when a vehicle is at a complete stop and is struck from behind by another vehicle. The vehicle, including its occupant, is accelerated forward from the energy transfer from impact. Because of the apposition of the seat back and the torso, the torso is accelerated along with the car. The occupants head often is not accelerated with the rest of the body due to the absence of a functional headrest. As a result, hyperextension of the neck occurs. This stretches the supporting structures of the neck and produces a whiplash injury. (See Figure 3, Rear Impact, Improper and Proper Headrest Use.) Fractures of the posterior elements of the cervical spine, eg, laminar fractures, pedicle fractures, spinous process fractures, may re-
e. Rollover
During a rollover, the unrestrained occupant can impact any part of the interior of the passenger compartment. Injuries may be predicted from the impact points on the patients skin. As a general rule, this type of mechanism produces more severe injuries because of the violent, multiple motions that occur during the rollover. This is especially true for the unbelted occupant.
f. Ejection
The injuries sustained by the occupant during the process of ejection may be greater than
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B. Organ Collision
1. Compression injury
Compression injuries occur when the anterior portion of the torso ceases to move forward and the posterior portion and internal organs continue their motion. The organs are eventually compressed from behind by the advancing posterior thoracoabdominal wall and the vertebral column, and in front by the impacted anterior structures. Blunt myocardial injury is a typical example of this type of injury mechanism. (See Figure 2, page 320, Frontal Impact, Unrestrained Driver.) Similar injury can occur in lung parenchyma or abdominal organs. The lungs and abdominal viscera represent a particular variation of this mechanism of injury and accentuate the principle that the state of the tissue at the time of energy transfer influences the tissue damage. Holding a crumpled paper bag in 1 hand and crushing it with the opposite hand does not produce any additional damage to the bag. Blowing it up, holding the neck tight, and crushing the bag causes it to rupture, similar to the rubber glove example given earlier. In a collision, it is instinctive for the patient to take a deep breath and hold it, closing the glottis. Compression of the thorax produces alveolar rupture with a resultant pneumothorax and/or tension pneumothorax. (See Figure 2, page 320, Frontal Impact, Unrestrained Driver.) The increase in intraabdominal pressure may produce diaphragmatic rupture and translocation of abdominal organs into the thoracic cavity. Transient hepatic congestion with blood from this transient valsalva maneuver may cause the liver to burst when compressive forces are applied. In a similar fashion, small bowel rupture can occur if a closed loop is compressed between the vertebral column and an improperly worn seat belt. Compression injuries to brain substance also can occur. Movement of the head associated with the application of a force through impact can be associated with rapid acceleration forces applied to the brain. This produces stress and deforma-
2. Deceleration injury
Deceleration injuries occur as the stabilizing portion of an organ, eg, renal pedicle, ligamentum teres, or descending thoracic aorta, ceases forward motion with the torso while the movable body part, eg, spleen, kidney or heart and aortic arch, continues to move forward. Shear force is developed in the aorta by the continued forward motion of the aortic arch with respect to the stationary descending aorta. The distal aorta is anchored to the spine and decelerates more rapidly with the torso. The shear forces are greatest where the arch and stable, descending aorta join at the ligamentum arteriosum. This mechanism of injury also may be operative with the spleen and kidney at their pedicle junctions; with the liver as the right and left lobes decelerate around the ligamentum teres, producing a central hepatic laceration; and in the skull when the posterior part of the brain separates from the skull, tearing vessels and producing space-occupying lesions. The numerous attachments of the dura, arachnoid, and pia inside the cranial vault effectively separate the brain into multiple compartments. These compartments are subjected to shear stress by both acceleration and deceleration forces. Another example is the flexible cervical spine attached to the relatively immobile thoracic spine accounting for the frequent injury identified at the C7 to T1 junction.
3. Restraint injury
The value of passenger restraints in reducing injury has been so well established that it is no longer a debatable issue. The history of restraining devices has its origins in the World War I era. In 1903, a modification of the luggage strap was placed in army aircraft to keep pilots from falling American College of Surgeons
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35 mph
Seconds
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3.186
Modified with permission from Eppinger R, Occupant restraint systems. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): Accidental Injury: Biomechanics and Prevention. New York, Springer-Verlag, 1993. A restrained driver and the vehicle travel at the same speed and brake to a stop with a deceleration of 0.5 g (16 feet sec2 or 4.8 m sec2). During the 0.01 second it takes for the inertial mechanism to lock the safety belt and couple the driver to the vehicle, the driver moves an additional 6.1 inches (15.25 cm) inside the passenger compartment.
out of the cockpit. Like today, the use of these safety devices did not gain unanimous popularity. In 1955, the United States Air Force recognized that more of their airmen were killed in automobile crashes than in aviation crashes and began aggressive automobile restraining system testing. The current 3-point restraints, when used properly, have been shown to reduce fatalities by 65% to 70% and produce a 10-fold reduction in serious injury. Presently, the greatest failure of the device is the occupants refusal to use the system. The value of occupant restraint devices, as well as a quantitative description of the energy transfers than can occur during a vehicular crash, are illustrated by a modification of an example published by Eppinger. (See Figure 4, Braking VehicleRestrained Occupant, and Figure 5, page 324, ColliAdvanced Trauma Life Support
sionUnrestrained Occupant.) Consider a 70-kg person traveling in a vehicle at 35 mph (56 kph) that slows to a stop by braking. Further consider the difference in energy transferred to the restrained and unrestrained occupants if the vehicle were to crash into an immovable object at 35 mph (56 kph). The dynamics of the energy transfer are illustrated graphically in Figure 4, Braking VehicleRestrained Occupant. The speeds of the vehicle and its passenger are shown on the y-axis and time in seconds on the x-axis. The integral, or area under the curve, represents the distance traveled with respect to the ground, and the slope of the curve is the deceleration. The deceleration can be compared with the acceleration due to gravity, or the g forces, experienced by the vehicle and the occupant.
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242 gs (Occupant)
Modified with permission from Eppinger R, Occupant restraint systems. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): Accidental Injury: Biomechanics and Prevention. New York, Springer-Verlag, 1993. Crashing into an immovable object from 35 mph (56 kph), the vehicle deforms by 24 inches (60 cm) and impacts the dashboard just as the vehicle comes to a stop. If the driver sustains only a 2-inch (5-cm) deformity, the driver decelerates at a velocity of 242 g over the 0.00653 second it takes to cease forward motion. The vehicle loses its kinetic energy over a longer period and sustains fewer g forces, although the initial velocity is identical.
In Figure 4, page 323, Braking VehicleRestrained Occupant, the brakes are applied to effect a 0.5 g deceleration (32.1739 feet sec2 0.5 = 16.09 feet sec2) (or 9.7 m sec2 0.5 = 4.8 m sec2). It takes just over 3 seconds for the vehicle to come to a complete stop and the distance traveled is 81 feet or 24.3 meters. Because the deceleration is relatively slow, the inertial lock of the restraint system does not engage. The forces acting on the occupant to slow the persons forward momentum (eg, seat friction) are of the same magnitude and timing as the vehicle. If for some reason there is a delay in the application of these forces to the occupant, the person continues to move forward inside the passenger compartment until the occupant is once again coupled to the
vehicle in some manner. For example, suppose the deceleration is of sufficient magnitude to lock the restraint system, but this requires 0.01 second after initiating the braking process. The occupant then moves another 6.1 inches (15.25 cm) inside the passenger compartment. The unrestrained passenger of a car that crashes into a concrete wall is graphically illustrated in Figure 5, CollisionUnrestrained Occupant. If the vehicle deforms by 24 inches (60 cm) from the force of impact, forward motion ceases after 0.078 second and a force of 19.85 g is applied to the car. The unrestrained occupant continues to move forward after the impact. Assuming the first interior surface is 24 inches (60 cm) from American College of Surgeons
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35 mph g
24 inches
Modified with permission from Eppinger R, Occupant restraint systems. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): Accidental Injury: Biomechanics and Prevention. New York, Springer-Verlag, 1993. Both driver and vehicle come to rest at the same time after impact. The inertial locking mechanism requires 0.01 seconds to engage, bringing the driver to a stop over 0.068 second. This accounts for the difference in g forces, but compared with the unrestrained driver, the force is significantly less forward motion. The vehicle loses its kinetic energy over a longer period and sustains fewer g forces, although the initial velocity is identical.
the force of impact, forward motion ceases (eg, dashboard, windscreen) at 2 feet (0.6 m) in front of the person, and the occupant impacts this surface just as the vehicle comes to rest. If the body of the passenger compresses by 2 inches (5 cm), the unrestrained passenger sustains a force of more than 242 g in 0.0065 second. By comparison, the restrained driver sustains only 22.7 g over 0.068 second. (See Figure 6, CollisionRestrained Occupant.) The 70-kg person who refuses to utilize the restraint system in the vehicle, thinking I can brace myself, must be able to bench press 16,975 pounds (7639 kg), or more than 8.5 tons (7.65 tonnes), in a crash at just 35 mph (56 kph). From the examples provided in Figures 4 through 6 one can see that the benefit of the restraint sysAdvanced Trauma Life Support
tem is to couple the occupant to the frame of the moving vehicle while the kinetic energy of the system is dissipated through maximum deformation of the vehicle over as great a time period as possible. This minimizes the transfer of energy to the occupant and is termed ride down in the biomechanics literature. Increasing availability of the air bag in vehicles may significantly reduce injuries sustained in frontal impacts. However, air bags are beneficial only in approximately 70% of collisions. These devices are not replacements for the safety belt and must be considered supplemental protective devices. Occupants in head-on collisions may benefit from the air bag, but only on the first impact. If there is a second impact into another
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C. Pedestrian Injury
More than 7000 pedestrians are killed in the United States each year after being struck by a motor vehicle. Another 110,000 suffer serious nonfatal injuries after a collision with a vehicle in motion. The problem is primarily urban in nature, with nearly 80% of such injuries occurring in cities or on residential roads. Evidence of braking is present in three-fourths of the incidents, reducing impact speeds to slightly over 10 mph (16 kph) on the average. It is estimated that nearly 90% of all pedestrian-auto interactions occur at speeds less than 30 mph (48 kph). Children constitute an exceptionally large percentage of those injured by collision with a vehicle. Thoracic, head, and lower extremity (in that order) account for the majority of injuries sustained by pedestrians. There are 3 impact phases to the injuries sustained by a pedestrian. (See Figure 8, page 328, Adult Pedestrian Injury Triad.)
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pact. As the design of vehicles change, so do the injury patterns seen when pedestrians are struck. Most recently manufactured passenger cars have lower front profiles and shorter hoods. This has shifted the injury patterns seen in both children and adults by altering the impact areas of the lower extremity. This trend may be offset to some degree by the increase in pickup trucks and recreational vehicles that are on the roadways.
another object, resulting in an additional collision. Organ compression injuries also occur as described previously.
D. Injury to Cyclists
Two-wheeled and multiwheeled cycles are used extensively in the world for means of transportation, business, and recreation. More than 100 million bicycles are in use in the United States and many more than that number in other countries. Nearly half of all Americans ride bicycles. Bicycle-related injuries are the most common recreational injury in the United States, accounting for more than 600,000 emergency department visits per year. Each year, bicycle crashes account for more than 1200 deaths and motorcycle collisions for nearly 5000. Motorcycle crashes result in injuries that are severe enough to require hospital admission to more than 360,000 individuals each year. Interestingly, the bicycle is
3. Ground impact
Head and spine injuries result as the patient falls off the vehicle to the ground or is accelerated into
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on the hazardous products list developed by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Cyclists and/or their passengers also may sustain compression, acceleration/deceleration, and shearing-type injuries. Cyclists are not protected by the vehicles structure or restraining devices, as are the occupants of an automobile. Cyclists are protected only by clothing and safety devices worn on their bodies, eg, helmets, boots, or protective clothing. Only the helmet has the ability to redistribute the energy transmission and reduce its intensity, and even this capability is limited. Obviously, the less protection that is worn, the greater the risk for injury. The extent of protective equipment worn by the patient is important precrash information to obtain from the prehospital personnel. Mechanisms of injury that may occur with cycle collisions include frontal impact, lateral impact, ejection, and laying the bike down. Additionally, the rider may be injured from simply falling off the vehicle or becoming entangled with the cycles mechanical components.
1. Frontal impact/ejection
The pivot point of the cycle is the front axle and the center of gravity is above this point near the seat. If the front wheel of the motorcycle collides with an object and stops, the motorcycle rotates forward on an arch with the moment arm directed toward the axle. Forward momentum is maintained until the cyclist and the rest of the cycle are acted on by forces to deplete the kinetic energy, such as secondary collision with the ground or stationary object. During this forward projection, the cyclists head, chest, or abdomen may impact with the handlebars. If the cyclist is projected over the handlebars and ejected from the bike, the thighs may impact with the handlebars, resulting in bilateral femur fractures. The degree of injury sustained during the secondary collision is dependent upon the site of impact, the kinetic energy of the cyclist, and the time interval over which the energy is depleted.
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E. Falls
Falls are the leading cause of nonfatal injury in the United States and the second leading cause of both spinal and brain injury. Similar to motor vehicle crashes, falls produce injury by a relatively abrupt change in velocity (deceleration). Whenever an external force is applied to the human body, the severity of injury is the result of the interaction between the physical factors of the force and the tissues of the body. The extent of injury to a falling body is related to the ability of the stationary surface to arrest the forward motion of the body. At impact, differential motion of tissues within the organism causes tissue disruption. Decreasing the rate of the deceleration and enlarging the surface area to which the energy is dissipated increase the tolerance to deceleration by promoting more uniform motion of the tissues. The characteristics of the contact surface that arrests the fall are important as well. Concrete, asphalt, or hard surfaces increase the rate of deceleration and are associated with more severe injuries. Injury also is dependent upon the elasticity and viscosity of body tissues. The tendency for a tissue to resume its prestressed condition following impact is related to its elasticity. Viscosity implies resistance to change of shape with changes in motion. The tolerance of the organism to deceleration forces is a function of these combined properties. The point beyond which additional force overcomes this tissue cohesion determines the magnitude of injury. Therefore, the severity of injury is determined by the kinematics of vertical deceleration, the viscoelastic properties of the tissue, and the physical characteristics of the impact surface. One other component that should be considered in determining the extent of injury is the position of the body relative to the impact surface. Consider the following examples. A man falls 15 feet (4.5 m) from the roof of a house. In the first example he lands on his feet, the second on his back, and in the last situation he lands on the back of his head with his neck in 15 of flexion. In the first example the entire energy transfer occurs over a surface area equivalent to the area of the mans feet, is transferred via the bones of the lower extremity to
4. Helmet
Helmet use for all cyclists, whether motorized or not, has been shown repeatedly to reduce the incidence of severe head injury, be associated with improved chances for survival, shorten hospital stay, reduce hospital costs, and perhaps be associated with less risk-taking behavior. Head injury occurs in more than one-third of all bicycle-related injuries, is responsible for 66% of hospital admissions, and is directly related to 85% of all bicycle-related fatalities. The statistics are similar for motorcyclists. Although the helmets ability to protect the head is somewhat limited, its utility should not be underestimated. The helmet is designed to reduce the force to the head by changing the kinetic energy of impact to the work of deformation of the padding and to distribute the force over as large an area as possible. This reduces the amount of energy that is delivered to the head. Helmets obviously are effective in reducing energy transfer by translation. It is generally accepted, however, that rotational or angular acceleration is most likely to produce Advanced Trauma Life Support
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F. Blast Injury
Explosions result from extremely rapid chemical transformation of relatively small volumes of solid, semisolid, liquid, or gaseous materials into gaseous products that rapidly expand to occupy a greater volume than the undetonated explosive occupied. If unimpeded, these rapidly expanding gaseous products assume the shape of a sphere. Inside this sphere the pressure greatly exceeds atmospheric pressure. The outward expansion of this sphere produces a thin, sharply defined shell of compressed gas that acts as a pressure wave at the periphery of the sphere. The pressure decreases rapidly as this pressure wave travels away from the site of detonation in proportion to the third power of the distance. Energy transfer occurs as the pressure wave induces oscillation in the media through which it travels. The positive pressure phase of the oscillation may reach several atmospheres in magnitude, but it is of extremely short duration, whereas the negative phase that follows is of longer duration. This latter fact accounts for the phenomenon of buildings falling inward. Blast injuries may be classified into primary, secondary, or tertiary. Primary blast injuries result from the direct effects of the pressure wave and are most injurious to gas-containing organs. The tympanic membrane is the most vulnerable to the effects of primary blast and may rupture if pressures exceed 2 atmospheres. Lung tissue may develop evidence of contusion, edema, and rupture resulting in pneumothorax as the result of primary blast injury. Rupture of the alveoli and pulmonary veins produces
A. Bullets
Most bullets fired from low- to medium-velocity weapons are made from lead. Lead melts when propelled above a velocity of 2000 feet per second (600 m per second). These high-velocity bullets may be fully jacketed (encased or covered) with coppernickel or steel to prevent meltdown. Some bullets are specifically designed to increase the amount of damage they cause. Recall that it is the transfer of energy to the tissue, the time over which the energy transfer occurs, and the surface area over which the energy exchange is distributed that determine the degree of tissue damage. Bullets with hollow noses or semijacketed coverings are designed to flatten on impact, thereby increasing their cross-sectional area and resulting in more rapid deceleration and consequentially a greater transfer of kinetic energy. Some bullets have been especially designed to fragment on impact or even explode, which extends tissue damage. Magnum rounds refer to cartridges with a greater amount of gunpowder than the normal round, which is designed to increase the muzzle velocity of the missile. American College of Surgeons
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Sharp missiles with small, cross-sectional fronts slow with tissue impact, resulting in little injury or cavitation.
Missiles with large, cross-sectional fronts, eg, hollowpoint bullets that spread or mushroom on impact, cause more injury or cavitation.
B. Velocity
The velocity of the missile is the most significant determinant of its wounding potential. The importance of velocity is demonstrated by the formula relating mass and velocity to kinetic energy. Examples of this relationship are listed in Table 1, page 333, Missile Kinetic Energy. Kinetic energy = (mass velocity2) 2 Weapons are usually classified based on the amount of energy produced by the projectiles they launch. 1. Low energyKnife or hand-energized missiles 2. Medium energyhandguns 3. High energyMilitary or hunting rifles The wounding capability of a bullet increases markedly above the critical velocity of 2000 feet per second (600 m per second). At this speed the bullet creates a temporary cavity due to tissue being compressed at the periphery of impact by the shock wave initiated by impact of the missile with tissue. Depending on the velocity of the missile, this cavity can have a diameter of up to 30 times that of the diameter of the bullet. The maximum diameter of this Advanced Trauma Life Support
temporary cavity occurs at the area of the greatest resistance to the bullet. This also is where the greatest degree of deceleration and energy transfer occurs. A bullet fired from a handgun with a standard round may produce a temporary cavity of 5 to 6 times the diameter of the bullet. Knife injuries result in little or no cavitation. Tissue damage as the result of a high-velocity missile can occur at some distance from the bullet tract itself. Some other aspects of missile trajectory are important in determining the amount of energy dissipated and the injuries produced. Yaw (the orientation of the longitudinal axis of the missile to its trajectory) and tumble increase the surface area of the bullet with respect to the tissue it contacts and, therefore, increase the amount of energy transferred. (See Figure 10, page 332, Ballistics Tumble and Yaw.) In general, the later the bullet begins to yaw after tissue penetration, the deeper the maximum injury. Bullet deformation and fragmentation of semijacketed ammunition increase surface area relative to the tissue and the dissipation of kinetic energy. Wounds inflicted by shotguns require special considerations. The muzzle velocity of most of these weapons is generally 1200 feet per second (360 m per second). After firing, the shot radiates in a conical distribution from the muzzle. With a choked or
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narrowed muzzle, 70% of the pellets are deposited in a 30-inch (75-cm) diameter circle at 40 yards (36 m). However, the shot is spherical and the coefficient of drag through air and tissue is quite high. As a result, the velocity of the spherical pellets declines rapidly after firing and further after impact. This weapon may be lethal at close range, but its destructive potential rapidly dissipates as distance increases. The area of maximal injury to tissue is relatively superficial unless the weapon is fired at close range. Shotgun blasts may carry clothing or deposit wadding (the paper or plastic that separates the powder and pellets in the shell) into the depths of the wound and become a source of infection if not removed.
The type of projectile (eg, jacketed or unjacketed, hollow point or ball ammunition), velocity, yaw, and the type of underlying tissue all influence the appearance of the bullet wound. If there is only 1 wound, it logically must be the entrance wound. An entrance wound usually lies against the underlying tissue due to the direction of the shock wave at impact, whereas an exit wound is not supported by the subcutaneous tissue for the same reason. Weapons most commonly used in the civilian sector cause a round or oval entrance wound with a surrounding 1- to 2-mm blackened area of burn or abrasion at the periphery of the wound from the spinning bullet passing through the skin. The injection of gas into the subcutaneous tissue from close-range injuries may produce crepitus around the entrance wound. Powder burns or tattooing of the edges of the entrance wound also may be identified. Exit wounds are usually ragged at the result of tissue tearing or splitting, which produces an irregular, or stellate, appearance.
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Abbreviations: ACP = automatic Colt pistol; CBC = conical bullet cap; FMJ = full metal jacket; HP-BT = hollow point boat tail; JHP = jacketed hollow point; SP = soft point. Adapted with permission from Barnes FC: Cartridges of the World, 9th edition, Frank C. Barnes and DBI Books, Inc., Northbrook, IL, 2000.
7. Child safety seats are currently saving at least 160 lives each year. As many as 52,600 pediatric injuries can be avoided with their proper use. 8. A vehicle occupant is 25 times more likely to be injured if thrown from a car rather than being belted in place. 9. In a 30-mph (48-kph) collision an unbelted driver or passenger slams into the windscreen or other interior surface of the vehicle with the same impact as a fall from a 3-story building. 10. The majority of fatal motor vehicle crashes
contain 1 or more of the following contributing factors: speed, alcohol, and failure to use the restraint system.
5. An unbelted adult holding a child in his/her lap in a 30-mph (48-kph) crash is thrown forward with the force of 1.5 tons (1350 tonnes). 6. An unrestrained occupant of a 35-mph (56kph) vehicular crash must be able to bench press approximately 17,000 pounds (7727 kg) to brace oneself.
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12. Sports and recreational activities and equipment were associated with more injuries requiring treatment in emergency departments than all
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Collicott PE: Concepts of trauma managementepidemiology, mechanisms and prevention. In: Skinner DV (ed): Cambridge Textbook of Emergency Medicine. England, Cambridge University Press, 1996. 2. Eppinger R: Occupant restraint systems. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): Accidental Injury: Biomechanics and Prevention. New York, Springer-Verlag, 1993, pp 186197. 3. Fackler ML: Physics of missile injuries. In: McSwain NE Jr, Kerstein MD (eds): Evaluation and Management of Trauma. East Norwalk, CT, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1987, pp 2553. 4. Feliciano DV, Wall MJ Jr: Patterns of injury. In: Moore EE, Mattox KL, Feliciano DV: Trauma, Second Edition. East Norwalk, CT, Appleton & Lange, 1991, pp 8196. 5. Fung YC: The application of biomechanics to the understanding and analysis of trauma. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): The Biomechanics of Trauma. Norwalk, CT, Appleton-CenturyCrofts, 1985, pp 1-16. 6. Greensher J: Non-automotive vehicle injuries in the adolescent. Pediatric Annals 1988; 17(2):114, 117121. 7. Kraus JF, Fife D, Conroy C: Incidence, severity and outcomes of brain injuries involving bicycles. American Journal of Public Health 1987; 77(1):7678. 8. Leads from the MMWR. Bicycle-related injuries: Data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System. Journal of the American Medical Association 1987; 257(24):3334, 3337. 9. Mackay M: Kinetics of vehicle crashes. In: Maull KI, Cleveland HC, Strauch GO, et al (eds): Advances in Trauma, Volume 2. Chicago, Yearbook Medical Publishers, 1987, pp 2124. 10. Maull KI, Whitley RE, Cardea JA: Vertical deceleration injuries. Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics 1981; 153(2):233236. 11. MacLaughlin TF, Zuby DS, Elias JC, et al: Vehicle interactions with pedestrians. In: Nahum AM, Melvin JW (eds): Accidental Injury: Biomechanics and Prevention. New York, Springer-Verlag, 1993, pp 539-566.
B. Bicycle Facts
1. Three hundred (300) children die each year
from bicycle-related injuries. Ninety percent (90%) of these deaths are the result of collisions with motor vehicles. Eighty percent (80%) of the deaths are related to head injury.
5. Bicycle helmets reduce the risk of head injury 6. Universal use of bicycle helmets would save
8. Every dollar spent on bicycle helmets saves 9. Twenty-two hundred (2200) children injured
in bicycle-related incidents sustain permanent disability. Bicycle helmets would prevent 1700 of these injuries. Lifetime medical savings would total $142 million (USD).
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