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Cx collar GSW neck
Christos Giannou x.giannou at gmail.comMon Aug 24 10:31:24 BST 2009
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QUOTE Question if I understand what your saying If the patient has a GSW to the neck do not use a c-collar. What if they were shot with a small caliber\medium to high velocity gun in the neck and ricochet up and down the spinal column. Please explain for educational reasons UNQUOTE Norman McSwain gives the simple answer: "The damage is already done. Immobilization will not prevent it worsening." Furthermore, forget the calibre and velocity. Whatever they may have been at exit from the muzzle of the gun, you have no idea of what they were at the moment of impact (ricochet of the bullet before hitting the body can change the mass and certainly its instability and wounding potential) and therefore the potential kinetic energy contained by the bullet. You have less information on the kinetic energy effectively transferred to the tissues and the tissue-projectile interaction. In addition, an understanding of tissue-projectile interaction (inertial forces, tissue elasticity or lack thereof, resistance to deformation of tissues etc) will tell you that the bullet CANNOT ricochet up and down the spinal column. The classical cliché: "Treat the wound, not the weapon" (Lindsey D. The idolatry of velocity, or lies, damn lies, and ballistics. J Trauma 1980; 20: 1068-1069.) is not a vain concept. Therefore, the wound, as Norman wrote: "The damage is already done." -- christos giannou Monemvasia Lakonia 23070 Greece tel & fax: (++30) 27320-61772 mob: (++30) 69 74 83 28 18
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