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Improved characterization of combat injury.
- Source :
-
The Journal of trauma [J Trauma] 2010 May; Vol. 68 (5), pp. 1139-50. - Publication Year :
- 2010
-
Abstract
- Background: Combat injury patterns differ from civilian trauma in that the former are largely explosion-related, comprising multiple mechanistic and fragment injuries and high-kinetic-energy bullets. Further, unlike civilians, U.S. armed forces combatants are usually heavily protected with helmets and Kevlar body armor with ceramic plate inserts. Searchable databases providing actionable, statistically valid knowledge of body surface entry wounds and resulting organ injury severity are essential to understanding combat trauma.<br />Methods: Two tools were developed to address these unique aspects of combat injury: (1) the Surface Wound Mapping (SWM) database and Surface Wound Analysis Tool (SWAT) software that were developed to generate 3D density maps of point-of-surface wound entry and resultant anatomic injury severity; and (2) the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) 2005-Military that was developed by a panel of military trauma surgeons to account for multiple injury etiology from explosions and other high-kinetic- energy weapons. Combined data from the Joint Theater Trauma Registry, Navy/Marine Combat Trauma Registry, and the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System Mortality Trauma Registry were coded in AIS 2005-Military, entered into the SWM database, and analyzed for entrance site and wounding path.<br />Results: When data on 1,151 patients, who had a total of 3,500 surface wounds and 12,889 injuries, were entered into SWM, surface wounds averaged 3.0 per casualty and injuries averaged 11.2 per casualty. Of the 3,500 surface wounds, 2,496 (71%) were entrance wounds with 6,631 (51%) associated internal injuries, with 2.2 entrance wounds and 5.8 associated injuries per casualty (some details cannot be given because of operational security). Crude deaths rates were calculated using Maximum AIS-Military.<br />Conclusion: These new tools have been successfully implemented to describe combat injury, mortality, and distribution of wounds and associated injuries. AIS 2005-Military is a more precise assignment of severity to military injuries. SWM has brought data from all three combat registries together into one analyzable database. SWM and SWAT allow visualization of wounds and associated injuries by region on a 3D model of the body.
- Subjects :
- Blast Injuries classification
Blast Injuries epidemiology
Blast Injuries etiology
Body Surface Area
Databases, Factual
Humans
Military Medicine
Military Personnel
Protective Clothing
Registries
Software
Transportation of Patients
Trauma Centers
Traumatology
United States epidemiology
Wounds, Gunshot classification
Wounds, Gunshot epidemiology
Wounds, Gunshot etiology
Abbreviated Injury Scale
Blast Injuries diagnosis
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted methods
Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods
Warfare
Wounds, Gunshot diagnosis
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1529-8809
- Volume :
- 68
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- The Journal of trauma
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 20453770
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/TA.0b013e3181d86a0d