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Blast from explosives causes a spectrum of blast injuries from the direct overpressure from an explosion, the negative pressure following the blast wave, or effects of these pressure changes. Formally, there are four classes of blast injury:[1]
Secondary and tertiary injury overlap significantly, and both are more common than primary blast injury. However, primary blast injuries are the most severe." Primary blast injury[edit]Many victims of primary blast injury will not survive to reach a hospital. Lung injury[edit]Spalling is the mechanism of the most severe primary lung injuries. In the specific context of lung injury, it takes place when a blast wave moves from higher-density solid tissue (e.g., bronchi) to air-filled areas of lower density, causing increased tension at their interface. Particles are hurled from the more-dense into the less-dense, tearing the wall between them and causing hemorrhage, edema, and the loss of structural integrity. On examination, signs can vary from bruising of the chest to massive bleeding from the mouth and nose, difficult breathing and poor oxygenation, and air leak, leading rapidly to death. The injury may be asymptomatic at first, and can be diagnosed only with imaging such as a chest X-ray or computed X-ray tomography scan, which may not be available in large disasters. Patients with a ruptured eardrum but no other symptoms should receive priority for imaging. [3] Symptomatic injury tends to develop early, and includes "pulmonary contusion, systemic air embolism, and free radical–associated injuries such as thrombosis, lipoxygenation, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). ARDS may be a result of direct lung injury or of shock from other body injuries." [4] Respiratory failure is often due to secondary additive effects such as shock, organ failure, or inhalation of smoke and toxic substances.[5] Gastrointestinal injury[edit]Cardiovascular injury[edit]Tympanic injury[edit]Secondary blast injury[edit]While primary injury is the most lethal, secondary injury is often the most prevalent, such as in the Oklahoma City bombing. Nonfatal secondary injury was four times as common as fatal injury in that event. [6] Traumatic amputation from secondary injury often is a marker for multisystem trauma and grave prognosis. [7] Tertiary blast injury[edit]Traumatic brain injury is increasingly common, especially among military personnel whose improved vehicle armor and personal protective equipment lets them survive blasts that previously would have been fatal. [8] Quaternary blast injury[edit]Of the four categories, these are the least unique to explosions, with similarity to "routine" trauma such as car accidents. The most significant exceptions are when blast injuries from the first three categories coexist, or if there is poisoning from explosive or incendiary residues. Crush injuries are much more common after explosions than after routine accidents, although they are seen in cave-ins and building collapses. References[edit]
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