Penetrating trauma: Difference between revisions

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==Overview==
==Overview==
'''Penetrating trauma''' is an [[injury]] that occurs primarily by an object piercing the skin or entering a [[tissue (biology)|tissue]] of the body.  The severity of the injury is determined largely by the velocity of the object that enters the body. High-velocity objects are usually projectiles such as bullets from high-powered or assault rifles.<ref name="brady">Daniel Limmer and Michael F. O'Keefe.  2005.  ''Emergency Care'' 10th ed.  Edward T. Dickinson, Ed.  Pearson, Prentice Hall.  Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Pages 189-190.</ref>  Bullets from [[handgun]]s and [[shotgun]]s are classed as medium-velocity projectiles.<ref name="brady"/>  Low-velocity items, such as [[knife|knives]], are usually propelled by a person's hand, and usually do damage only to the area that is directly contacted by the object.<ref name="brady"/>  In addition to causing damage to the tissues they contact, medium- and high-velocity projectiles cause a [[cavitation injury]]: as the object enters the body, it creates a pressure wave which forces tissue out of the way, creating a cavity that can be much larger than the object itself.<ref name="brady"/>  The tissues soon move back into place, eliminating the cavity, but the cavitation frequently does considerable damage first.<ref name="brady"/>  Cavitation can be especially damaging when it affects delicate tissues such as the [[brain]], as occurs in [[penetrating head trauma]].
'''Penetrating trauma''' is an [[injury]] that occurs primarily by an object piercing the skin or entering a [[tissue (biology)|tissue]] of the body.  The severity of the injury is determined largely by the velocity of the object that enters the body. High-velocity objects are usually projectiles such as bullets from high-powered or assault rifles.<ref name="brady">Daniel Limmer and Michael F. O'Keefe.  2005.  ''Emergency Care'' 10th ed.  Edward T. Dickinson, Ed.  Pearson, Prentice Hall.  Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Pages 189-190.</ref>  Bullets from handguns and shotguns are classed as medium-velocity projectiles.<ref name="brady"/>  Low-velocity items, such as knives, are usually propelled by a person's hand, and usually do damage only to the area that is directly contacted by the object.<ref name="brady"/>  In addition to causing damage to the tissues they contact, medium- and high-velocity projectiles cause a [[cavitation injury]]: as the object enters the body, it creates a pressure wave which forces tissue out of the way, creating a cavity that can be much larger than the object itself.<ref name="brady"/>  The tissues soon move back into place, eliminating the cavity, but the cavitation frequently does considerable damage first.<ref name="brady"/>  Cavitation can be especially damaging when it affects delicate tissues such as the [[brain]], as occurs in [[penetrating head trauma]].


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 19:01, 23 January 2009

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Overview

Penetrating trauma is an injury that occurs primarily by an object piercing the skin or entering a tissue of the body. The severity of the injury is determined largely by the velocity of the object that enters the body. High-velocity objects are usually projectiles such as bullets from high-powered or assault rifles.[1] Bullets from handguns and shotguns are classed as medium-velocity projectiles.[1] Low-velocity items, such as knives, are usually propelled by a person's hand, and usually do damage only to the area that is directly contacted by the object.[1] In addition to causing damage to the tissues they contact, medium- and high-velocity projectiles cause a cavitation injury: as the object enters the body, it creates a pressure wave which forces tissue out of the way, creating a cavity that can be much larger than the object itself.[1] The tissues soon move back into place, eliminating the cavity, but the cavitation frequently does considerable damage first.[1] Cavitation can be especially damaging when it affects delicate tissues such as the brain, as occurs in penetrating head trauma.

See also

Reference

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Daniel Limmer and Michael F. O'Keefe. 2005. Emergency Care 10th ed. Edward T. Dickinson, Ed. Pearson, Prentice Hall. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Pages 189-190.

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