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Background
Explosive events have the potential to inflict numerous casualties with multiple injuries. The complexity of this scenario is exacerbated by the fact that few providers or medical facilities have experience with mass casualty events in which human and material resources can be rapidly overwhelmed. One significant difference between explosion-related injury and other injury mechanisms are the number of patients and multiplicity of injuries which require a higher allocation of resources. With this caveat, the appropriate utilization of radiology resources has the potential to impact inhospital diagnosis and triage and is an essential element in the optimizing the management of the explosive injured patient.
Initial Evaluation
Primary Blast Injury is caused by the overpressure blast wave produced by high-order explosives, primarily affecting air-filled organs and cavities such as the ear, lung, and abdomen. This blast wave is magnified by the reflection of surfaces as seen in closed-space explosions (e.g., inside a building, bus, train).
Radiological diagnosis of primary blast injury focuses on pulmonary and enteric barotrauma. Pulmonary barotrauma is characterized by pulmonary opacification secondary to diffuse pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage and pneumothorax.
Secondary Blast Injury is characterized by trauma due to impact from bomb fragments, to include the casing of the bomb in addition to objects added to the device to increase lethality (e.g., screws, nails, nuts and bolts). It can also result from debris external to the bomb that is secondarily propelled by the explosion. Secondary blast injury primarily causes penetrating trauma, but may also cause blunt trauma. Patients can sustain penetration of any region of the body, and typically have fragment penetrations in multiple body regions.
Radiological diagnosis of secondary blast injury helps to prioritize treatment by identifying life-threatening injury that may require timely intervention. For example, radiological imaging can be used as follows:
Tertiary blast injury results from the victim being thrown by the force of the blast wind. These injuries primarily involve blunt trauma, but may also be classified as penetrating trauma (e.g., impalement on sharp object).
Radiological evaluation of tertiary blast injury primarily focuses on identifying fractures, but also includes the detection of other injuries. For example:
Summary and Disposition
The severity and diversity of injuries caused by explosions provide treatment challenges for emergency medical providers.
This fact sheet is part of a series of materials developed by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for clinicians on blast injuries. For more information, visit CDC on the Web at: www.emergency.cdc.gov/BlastInjuries.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
June 2009