Stewart Sarah K, Pearce A P, Clasper Jon C
Academic Department of Military Surgery and Trauma, Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, Birmingham, UK.
Centre for Blast Injury Studies, Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
J R Army Med Corps. 2019 Feb;165(1):18-21. doi: 10.1136/jramc-2018-000942. Epub 2018 Apr 21.
Death as a consequence of underbody blast (UBB) can most commonly be attributed to central nervous system injury. UBB may be considered a form of tertiary blast injury but is at a higher rate and somewhat more predictable than injury caused by more classical forms of tertiary injury. Recent studies have focused on the transmission of axial load through the cervical spine with clinically relevant injury caused by resultant compression and flexion. This paper seeks to clarify the pattern of head and neck injuries in fatal UBB incidents using a pragmatic anatomical classification.
This retrospective study investigated fatal UBB incidents in UK triservice members during recent operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Head and neck injuries were classified by anatomical site into: skull vault fractures, parenchymal brain injuries, base of skull fractures, brain stem injuries and cervical spine fractures. Incidence of all injuries and of each injury type in isolation was compared.
129 fatalities as a consequence of UBB were identified of whom 94 sustained head or neck injuries. 87 casualties had injuries amenable to analysis. Parenchymal brain injuries (75%) occurred most commonly followed by skull vault (55%) and base of skull fractures (32%). Cervical spine fractures occurred in only 18% of casualties. 62% of casualties had multiple sites of injury with only one casualty sustaining an isolated cervical spine fracture.
Improvement of UBB survivability requires the understanding of fatal injury mechanisms. Although previous biomechanical studies have concentrated on the effect of axial load transmission and resultant injury to the cervical spine, our work demonstrates that cervical spine injuries are of limited clinical relevance for UBB survivability and that research should focus on severe brain injury secondary to direct head impact.
车底爆炸(UBB)导致的死亡最常见的原因是中枢神经系统损伤。UBB可被视为一种三级爆炸伤,但发生率更高,且比更典型的三级损伤形式所造成的损伤更具可预测性。最近的研究集中在轴向载荷通过颈椎的传递以及由此产生的压缩和屈曲所导致的具有临床相关性的损伤。本文旨在通过实用的解剖学分类来阐明致命UBB事件中头颈部损伤的模式。
这项回顾性研究调查了英国三军成员在最近阿富汗和伊拉克行动期间发生的致命UBB事件。头颈部损伤按解剖部位分为:颅骨穹窿骨折、脑实质损伤、颅底骨折、脑干损伤和颈椎骨折。比较了所有损伤以及每种单独损伤类型的发生率。
共确定了129例因UBB导致的死亡,其中94例头部或颈部受伤。87例伤员的损伤适合进行分析。脑实质损伤(75%)最为常见,其次是颅骨穹窿骨折(55%)和颅底骨折(32%)。颈椎骨折仅发生在18%的伤员中。62%的伤员有多个损伤部位,只有1例伤员为孤立的颈椎骨折。
提高UBB的生存能力需要了解致命伤机制。尽管先前的生物力学研究集中在轴向载荷传递的影响以及由此对颈椎造成的损伤,但我们的研究表明,颈椎损伤对UBB生存能力的临床相关性有限,研究应集中在直接头部撞击导致的严重脑损伤上。