Trauma can be applied by 4 basic mechanisms?
What are the 3 major categories we use to describe an injury?
What are the types of blunt force injuries?
Describe some common Contusions Patterns?
What is tramline bruising?
Impact of a rod-like object pushing blood to either side causing a long area of pallor with strips of bruising to either side
What factors effect prominence of bruising?
How can we observe an abrasion to learn more about the injury?
skin tags can indicate the direction of the force
Also the pattern of the abrasion can determine the instrument used
What are the different types of sharp force wounds?
Incised - Slashing motion creates a superficial wound longer than it is deep
Stab - thrusting motion creates a penetrating wound deeper than it is long
What can we tell form the pattern of a stab wound?
Different types of instrument e.g. scissors, screwdrivers and knives all look different.
If a knife is double or single bladed
Somtimes the surrounding bruise can indicate the shape of the hilt (if it went all the way in)
What are the types of defensive injuries?
- Active where the victim tries to grab the weapon or the attackers hand
How do passive and active defensive injuries look different?
Passive shows slices with skin flaps on the back of the hands and forearms
Active shows sliced, shelved wound on the palm & webspaces (mostly the 1st web space)
What appearances would suggest a wound to be self-inflicted?
What factors affect the consequence of an injury
Type of insult e.g. sharp or blunt
Target tissue e.g. fat/muscle vs important vessels/organs
Force e.g. a high speed RTA vs just falling
No. of impacts
Patient presents dead at the scene after being punched to the side of the jaw, what likely happened?
Punch causes a rapid rotation of the neck which ruptures the vertebral arteries as the cross the dura leading to subarachnoid haemorrhage, along with axonal injury to the brainstem resulting in immediate cardiac arrest
Patient presents with an intracranial bleed after RTA, whats the likely course the injury took?
Sudden change of direction of motion in an RTA often causes the brain to pull the bridging veins apart resulting in a subdural haemorrhage
PAtient presents with a depressed fracture to their temple and signs of rising ICP, whats happened?
the injury to the temple has ruptured the middle meningeal artery resulting in an extradural haemorrhage
Define the difference betweeen Diffuse Axonal Injury and Traumatic Axonal Injury?
Often used interchangeably but:
What can we tell from a patients injuries after an RTA?
Can tell an RTA often from the specific safety glass wounds.
Can tell if a patient was driving by the pattern of steering wheel bruise/fractures
Can get some idea of the size/shape of the car from a pedestrians injuries
How can we tell if there have been post-mortem injuries?
Lack of vital reaction and parchmentation