Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries

Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) came to prominence in Iraq and became the primary weapon used by insurgent forces in Afghanistan against coalition troops and vehicles in the late 20th and early 21st century. IEDs caused over 50% of all UK combat fatalities in these conflicts, many of whom suffer...

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Main Author: Singleton, James
Other Authors: Bull, Anthony ; Clasper, Jonathan
Published: Imperial College London 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739588
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7395882019-03-05T15:31:09ZBlast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuriesSingleton, JamesBull, Anthony ; Clasper, Jonathan2015Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) came to prominence in Iraq and became the primary weapon used by insurgent forces in Afghanistan against coalition troops and vehicles in the late 20th and early 21st century. IEDs caused over 50% of all UK combat fatalities in these conflicts, many of whom suffered extremity traumatic amputations (TAs). To date, understanding of the mechanism of blast-mediated TA has been based on limited anatomical and minimal radiological injury data. Blast-mediated TAs were first thought to be solely attributable to limb flail caused by a blast wind of sufficient velocity to bring about extremity avulsion. This injury mechanism theory was significantly modified in 1996 following UK military medical research: the shockwave – ‘primary blast injury’ – was thought to be pivotal in the creation of blast-mediated TAs, coupling directly into the limb and causing a long bone fracture prior to gross limb movement, with the blast wind – ‘tertiary blast injury’ - subsequently displacing the limb causing amputation through the aforementioned fracture. A strong link was believed to exist between TA and exposure to lethal levels of primary blast loading. Guillotine-type TAs were also seen due to large fragments energised by the blast (secondary blast injury). Modern battlefield blast casualty (survivors and fatalities) analysis, combined with incident data analysis of each blast event, has not shown the previously asserted link between TA and primary blast lung injury. Furthermore, the high proportion of through joint TAs (22.4% in fatalities vs. 1.3% reported previously), determined by postmortem CT imaging, has indicated pure flail as a valid injury mechanism. These injuries thus appear to have multiple blast injury mechanisms - primary and tertiary, secondary, and (previously unappreciated) pure tertiary – and a greater understanding of these injury modalities has significant implications for mitigation and prevention strategies.660.6Imperial College Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739588http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/58867Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 660.6
spellingShingle 660.6
Singleton, James
Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
description Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) came to prominence in Iraq and became the primary weapon used by insurgent forces in Afghanistan against coalition troops and vehicles in the late 20th and early 21st century. IEDs caused over 50% of all UK combat fatalities in these conflicts, many of whom suffered extremity traumatic amputations (TAs). To date, understanding of the mechanism of blast-mediated TA has been based on limited anatomical and minimal radiological injury data. Blast-mediated TAs were first thought to be solely attributable to limb flail caused by a blast wind of sufficient velocity to bring about extremity avulsion. This injury mechanism theory was significantly modified in 1996 following UK military medical research: the shockwave – ‘primary blast injury’ – was thought to be pivotal in the creation of blast-mediated TAs, coupling directly into the limb and causing a long bone fracture prior to gross limb movement, with the blast wind – ‘tertiary blast injury’ - subsequently displacing the limb causing amputation through the aforementioned fracture. A strong link was believed to exist between TA and exposure to lethal levels of primary blast loading. Guillotine-type TAs were also seen due to large fragments energised by the blast (secondary blast injury). Modern battlefield blast casualty (survivors and fatalities) analysis, combined with incident data analysis of each blast event, has not shown the previously asserted link between TA and primary blast lung injury. Furthermore, the high proportion of through joint TAs (22.4% in fatalities vs. 1.3% reported previously), determined by postmortem CT imaging, has indicated pure flail as a valid injury mechanism. These injuries thus appear to have multiple blast injury mechanisms - primary and tertiary, secondary, and (previously unappreciated) pure tertiary – and a greater understanding of these injury modalities has significant implications for mitigation and prevention strategies.
author2 Bull, Anthony ; Clasper, Jonathan
author_facet Bull, Anthony ; Clasper, Jonathan
Singleton, James
author Singleton, James
author_sort Singleton, James
title Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
title_short Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
title_full Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
title_fullStr Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
title_full_unstemmed Blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
title_sort blast-mediated traumatic amputation : underlying mechanisms and associated injuries
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2015
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.739588
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