High-velocity gunshot wounds to the head: Analysis of 135 patients
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Date
2005
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Abstract
Head injuries due to high-velocity missiles and shrapnel as a result of military conflicts have become a very important cause of death or severe neurological deficits. Military-type missiles have high velocities and transfer higher amounts of energy to neural tissue, compared to civil-type missiles. This physical phenomenon also causes greater neural tissue destruction. Shrapnel particles derive from blasts and cause less severe injury because of the irregular particle shape and low energy transmission. This study analyzed 135 patients with head trauma, 80 patients (59%) injured by missiles and 55 patients (41%) by shrapnel. Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores at admission were 3 to 7 in 69 patients, 8 to 10 in 29 patients, and 11 to 15 in 37 patients. The most common anatomical localizations were the right frontoparietal region in 42 patients and the left frontoparietal region in 40 patients. One hundred patients (74%) were operated on immediately and 35 patients (26%) were treated conservatively in the intensive care unit. Ten of the 135 patients died (7.4%), seven from missile injury and three from shrapnel injury. In this study, we found that high mortality was associated with low GCS score at admission, presence of multilobar or skull base injuries, and involvement of ventricles. Early and aggressive surgical intervention decreased the mortality.
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Keywords
Adult , Brain Injuries , Glasgow Coma Scale , Head , Humans , Male , Neurosurgical Procedures , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Wounds, Gunshot , adult , article , brain ventricle , cause of death , conservative treatment , early diagnosis , emergency surgery , energy transfer , female , Glasgow coma scale , gunshot injury , head injury , human , injury scale , intensive care , major clinical study , male , military phenomena , missile wound , mortality , neurological complication , pathological anatomy , scoring system , skull base fracture , surgical mortality , velocity