Blast injury: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Primary blast wave increased in closed space - detonation in corner has potential to increase blast yield to 8x | |||
*Recent enhanced-blast weapons (EBW) disperses gas before explosion - larger blast wave with lower pressure amplitude that diffuses around corners | |||
===Spalling Effect=== | |||
''Due to blast pressure forces, injuries are to organs with air-fluid interfaces (spalling effect)'' | |||
*TMs | |||
*Alveoli | |||
*GI tract | |||
===Situational Examples=== | |||
*Military - young healthy soldiers with body armor reducing thoracic/abdominal injuries but significant groin and lower extremity injuries | |||
*Civilian - children to elderly, higher rates of penetrating thoracic/abdominal injury | |||
===Injury Classifications=== | |||
{|class="wikitable" | |||
|+ Classification | |||
|- | |||
! scope="col" | '''Blast Type''' | |||
! scope="col" | '''Injury Cause''' | |||
! scope="col" | '''Injuries''' | |||
! scope="col" | '''Example''' | |||
|- | |||
| Primary||Direct effect from shockwave||Sheer and stress forces||[[TM rupture]], Ocular Injury, [[concussion]], blast lung | |||
|- | |||
| Secondary||Impact of fragments||Penetrating trauma, amps, lacs|| | |||
|- | |||
| Tertiary ||Blast propels body or large object into body||[[Crush injury]] and blunt trauma||Similar to MVC: Fractures, [[Pneumothorax]], Hemopneumothorax | |||
|- | |||
| Quaternary ||Environmental||Burns, Toxins, Weather|| | |||
|- | |||
| Quinary ||Bodily absorption of contaminates||Hypermetabolic state|| | |||
|} | |||
{{Department of navy blast effects}} | |||
==Clinical Features== | |||
===Pulmonary=== | |||
*Blast lung is the most common fatal primary blast injury (PBI) | |||
*[[Pulmonary contusion]] | |||
*[[Pneumomediastinum]] due to alveolar rupture - [[pneumothorax]], subcutaneous emphysema, [[pneumopericardium]], pneumoretroperitoneum, pneumoperitoneum, [[air embolus]] | |||
*Thrombosis, [[DIC]], [[ARDS]] | |||
===HEENT=== | |||
*[[TM rupture]] most common - not a marker of PBI severity or prognosis | |||
*Hemotympanum | |||
*Ossicle injury | |||
*Direct [[ocular Trauma|ophthalmic injury]], [[foreign bodies]], or ophthalmic artery [[air embolus]] | |||
===Thoracic=== | |||
*[[shock|Cardiovascular collapse]] (within seconds) | |||
*[[Hypotension]] due to impaired reflex that increases SVR | |||
===Infectious Disease=== | |||
*Transmission of disease due to penetrating trauma is rare but possible with HIV, HCV, HBV | |||
===Musculoskeletal=== | |||
*[[Amputation]]s | |||
*[[Burns]] | |||
===Markers of severe blast injury=== | |||
*> 10% [[TBSA]] burn | |||
*Skull, facial fracture | |||
*Penetrating injury to head or thorax | |||
*Traumatic amputations | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | |||
{{MCI types}} | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
[[File:Massive right hemothorax.jpg|thumb|[[CXR]] with large right sided hemothorax (and widened mediastinum).]] | |||
*[[CXR]] - butterfly distribution, bilateral patchy infiltrates | |||
*CT chest | |||
*[[FAST]], comprehensive CT | |||
*Repeat clinical abdominal exams looking for peritonitis - X-rays, US, CT insensitive except in perforation | |||
*Initial [[CT head]] may not be enough - may require [[MRI]] for DAI | |||
*Labs | |||
**Consider carboxyhemoglobin and electrolytes | |||
**Screening [[UA]] for significant explosions | |||
**[[Burn]] labs ([[rhabdomyolysis]], [[compartment syndrome]], severe [[burns]]) | |||
**[[DIC]] labs (PT, aPTT, CBC, D-dimer, thrombin time, fibrinogen) | |||
**[[White phosphorus]] labs ([[hypocalcemia]], [[hyperphosphatemia]], LFTs) | |||
==Management== | |||
*[[Chest tube]] for significant [[hemothorax]] and/or [[pneumothorax]] | |||
*[[pRBCs]] and [[FFP]] in 1:1 ratio with platelets for hemodynamically unstable patients | |||
*[[TM rupture]] - initial treatment supportive and enough for 75% with spontaneous healing; operative repair may be necessary for others | |||
*Operative exploration for [[peritonitis]] | |||
*[[Air embolus]] (rare) - isolate air in apex of LV by placing patient in left decubitus, head down, feet up position | |||
==Disposition== | |||
*Ambulatory patient with normal TM evaluation at low risk for occult blast injury - discharge with precautions | |||
*All others require admission | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Explosions]] | |||
*[[Wound ballistics]] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:EMS]] | |||
[[Category:Trauma]] | [[Category:Trauma]] | ||
Latest revision as of 20:13, 17 April 2024
Background
- Primary blast wave increased in closed space - detonation in corner has potential to increase blast yield to 8x
- Recent enhanced-blast weapons (EBW) disperses gas before explosion - larger blast wave with lower pressure amplitude that diffuses around corners
Spalling Effect
Due to blast pressure forces, injuries are to organs with air-fluid interfaces (spalling effect)
- TMs
- Alveoli
- GI tract
Situational Examples
- Military - young healthy soldiers with body armor reducing thoracic/abdominal injuries but significant groin and lower extremity injuries
- Civilian - children to elderly, higher rates of penetrating thoracic/abdominal injury
Injury Classifications
| Blast Type | Injury Cause | Injuries | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Direct effect from shockwave | Sheer and stress forces | TM rupture, Ocular Injury, concussion, blast lung |
| Secondary | Impact of fragments | Penetrating trauma, amps, lacs | |
| Tertiary | Blast propels body or large object into body | Crush injury and blunt trauma | Similar to MVC: Fractures, Pneumothorax, Hemopneumothorax |
| Quaternary | Environmental | Burns, Toxins, Weather | |
| Quinary | Bodily absorption of contaminates | Hypermetabolic state |
Effects based on blast pressure[1]
| Potential Injury | Pressure (PSI) | Structural Effects |
| Loss of balance/temporary ear damage | 0.5-3 psi | Glass shatters; facade fails |
| Slight chance of eardrum rupture | 5-6 psi | Cinderblock shatters; steel structures fail; containers collapse; utility poles fail |
| 50% chance of eardrum rupture | 15 psi | Structural failure of typical construction |
| Lung collapse/damage | 30 psi | Reinforced construction failure |
| Fatal injuries | 100 + psi* | Structural failure |
Clinical Features
Pulmonary
- Blast lung is the most common fatal primary blast injury (PBI)
- Pulmonary contusion
- Pneumomediastinum due to alveolar rupture - pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, pneumopericardium, pneumoretroperitoneum, pneumoperitoneum, air embolus
- Thrombosis, DIC, ARDS
HEENT
- TM rupture most common - not a marker of PBI severity or prognosis
- Hemotympanum
- Ossicle injury
- Direct ophthalmic injury, foreign bodies, or ophthalmic artery air embolus
Thoracic
- Cardiovascular collapse (within seconds)
- Hypotension due to impaired reflex that increases SVR
Infectious Disease
- Transmission of disease due to penetrating trauma is rare but possible with HIV, HCV, HBV
Musculoskeletal
Markers of severe blast injury
- > 10% TBSA burn
- Skull, facial fracture
- Penetrating injury to head or thorax
- Traumatic amputations
Differential Diagnosis
Mass casualty incident
- Radiation exposure (disaster)
- Dirty bomb
- Bioterrorism
- Chemical weapons
- Mass shooting
- Natural Disaster (e.g. Hurricane, Earthquake, Tornado, Tsunami, etc)
- Unintentional large-scale incident (e.g. building collapse, train derailment, etc)
- Major pandemic
- Explosions
Evaluation
CXR with large right sided hemothorax (and widened mediastinum).
- CXR - butterfly distribution, bilateral patchy infiltrates
- CT chest
- FAST, comprehensive CT
- Repeat clinical abdominal exams looking for peritonitis - X-rays, US, CT insensitive except in perforation
- Initial CT head may not be enough - may require MRI for DAI
- Labs
- Consider carboxyhemoglobin and electrolytes
- Screening UA for significant explosions
- Burn labs (rhabdomyolysis, compartment syndrome, severe burns)
- DIC labs (PT, aPTT, CBC, D-dimer, thrombin time, fibrinogen)
- White phosphorus labs (hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, LFTs)
Management
- Chest tube for significant hemothorax and/or pneumothorax
- pRBCs and FFP in 1:1 ratio with platelets for hemodynamically unstable patients
- TM rupture - initial treatment supportive and enough for 75% with spontaneous healing; operative repair may be necessary for others
- Operative exploration for peritonitis
- Air embolus (rare) - isolate air in apex of LV by placing patient in left decubitus, head down, feet up position
Disposition
- Ambulatory patient with normal TM evaluation at low risk for occult blast injury - discharge with precautions
- All others require admission
See Also
References
- ↑ Terrorism Handbook for Operational Responders by Armando Bevalacqua and Richard Stilp (1998) and the Department of the Navy EODB 60 A-1-1-4 (2001) “Table A-1 http://www.fema.gov/pdf/plan/prevent/rms/428/fema428_ch4.pdf
