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J C Clasper

Researcher at Imperial College London

Publications -  22
Citations -  618

J C Clasper is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Amputation. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 22 publications receiving 538 citations. Previous affiliations of J C Clasper include Frimley Park Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.

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Improvised explosive devices: pathophysiology, injury profiles and current medical management.

TL;DR: The aim of this review article is to describe the physics and injury profile from these different devices and to present the current clinical evidence that underpins their medical management.
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Predicting the need for early amputation in ballistic mangled extremity injuries.

TL;DR: In this paper, scoring systems have been developed with amputation threshold values to help guide the decision to decide whether to amputate after high-energy trauma to the lower extremity.
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Blast mines: physics, injury mechanisms and vehicle protection.

TL;DR: The stand-off nature of its design has allowed insurgents to cause significant injuries to security forces in current conflicts with little personal risk and AV mines and improvised explosive devices have become the most common cause of death and injury to Coalition and local security forces operating in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Heterotopic ossification: a systematic review

TL;DR: A systematic review in PubMed and the Cochrane Database identified research articles related to HO to illustrate the military problem of HO and its management, current research concepts and experimental theories regarding HO, and served as a gap analysis providing detail of any knowledge deficit in this field.
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Died of wounds: a mortality review

TL;DR: Severe head injury was the most common cause of death of casualties deemed to have died from their injuries after arriving at a medical treatment facility during the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, and none of this group had salvageable injuries.