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Journal ArticleDOI

Penetrating missile injuries during asymmetric warfare in the 2003 Gulf conflict

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TLDR
War wounds produce a significant burden on medical facilities in wartime and workload from the recent conflict was documented in order to guide future medical needs.
Abstract
Background: War wounds produce a significant burden on medical facilities in wartime. Workload from the recent conflict was documented in order to guide future medical needs. Methods: All data on war injuries were collected prospectively. This information was supplemented with a review of all patients admitted during the study period. Results: During the first 2 weeks of the conflict, the sole British field hospital in the region received 482 casualties. One hundred and four were battle injuries of which nine were burns. Seventy-nine casualties had their initial surgery performed by British military surgeons and form the study group. Twenty-nine casualties (37 per cent) sustained gunshot wounds, 49 (62 per cent) suffered wounds from fragmentation weapons and one casualty detonated an antipersonnel mine. These 79 patients had a total of 123 wounds that were scored prospectively using the Red Cross Wound Classification. Twenty-seven (34 per cent) of the wounded were non-combatants; eight of these were children. Four patients (5 per cent) died. Conclusion: War is changing; modern conflicts appear likely to be fought in urban or remote environments, producing different wounding patterns and placing non-combatants in the line of fire. Military medical skills training and available resources must reflect these fundamental changes in preparation for future conflicts. Copyright © 2005 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Pain and combat injuries in soldiers returning from Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom: implications for research and practice.

TL;DR: Several innovative approaches for improving the pain care provided to OEF and OIF military personnel during acute stabilization, transport, medical-surgical treatment, and rehabilitation are described and summary data characterizing the soldiers, pain management services provided, and associated outcomes are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Injuries from roadside improvised explosive devices.

TL;DR: The injury profile seen with EFP-IEDs does not follow the traditional pattern of injuries seen with conventional high explosives and improvements in vehicle protection may prevent the EFP from entering the passenger compartments and thereby reduce fatalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuropsychiatric diagnosis and management of chronic sequelae of war-related mild to moderate traumatic brain injury.

TL;DR: Soldiers with a traumatic brain injury (TBI) present with an array of neuropsychiatric symptoms that can be grouped into nosological clusters, and with a multidimensional approach (such as the biopsychosocial model), psychological, occupational, and social dysfunction can be delineated and managed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of casualties during the Iraqi insurgency 2006–A British field hospital experience

TL;DR: Injuries in conflict produce a pattern of injury that is not seen in routine UK surgical practice, and knowledge and training in the management of these injuries is relevant to both military and civilian surgeons.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A profile of combat injury.

TL;DR: Recognition of differences in combat trauma can help bring focus to resuscitation research for combat settings and can serve to foster greater civilian-military collaboration in both basic and transitional research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Penetrating missile injuries in the Gulf war 1991

TL;DR: During the recent Gulf war 63 patients with penetrating missile injuries (including 29 Iraqi prisoners of war) underwent operation in a British Army Field Hospital, and their injuries and initial operative management are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Small fragment wounds: biophysics and pathophysiology.

TL;DR: The work presented here shows that the potential culture medium within the wound is small and can be removed by the normal bodily responses, and if bacterial colonization can be prevented in the early stages by the timely use of antibiotics, surgery may be unnecessary.
Journal Article

Field surgery on a future conventional battlefield: strategy and wound management.

TL;DR: The pathophysiology of modern war wounds is contrasted with ballistic wounds commonly encountered in peacetime, but it should be noted that even in peactime the modern terrorist may have access to sophisticated military weaponry, and that patients injured by them may fall within the catchment area of any civilian hospital.
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