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Journal Article

Citation

Scott BA, Fletcher JR, Pulliam MW, Harris RD. Neurosurgery 1986; 18(1): 107-110.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, Congress of Neurological Surgeons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3945371

Abstract

The Beirut terrorist bombing on October 23, 1983, caused 234 immediate deaths and injured at least 112 survivors. Military medical records were available for each casualty; postmortem examination reports were available for each immediate fatality. This represented a unique opportunity to assess type, incidence, treatment, and outcome of neurological injuries suffered in a mass casualty terrorist bombing situation. Three categories of neurological injuries are described: head injuries, spine and spinal cord injuries, and peripheral nerve injuries. The following types and numbers of injuries occurred among the 112 immediate survivors of the explosion: 37 head injuries--28 concussions, 20 scalp lacerations, 13 skull fractures, 6 facial bone fractures, 4 cerebral contusions, 5 dural lacerations, 2 cerebrospinal fluid fistulas, and 2 intracerebral hematomas; 2 spine or spinal cord injuries--1 cervical and 1 thoracolumbar spine fracture associated with neurological deficit; and 9 peripheral nerve injuries--1 facial nerve palsy, 2 brachial plexus palsies, 1 median and 1 radial nerve palsy, and 4 peroneal nerve palsies. Among 234 immediate fatalities, the types and numbers of neurological injuries were: 167 head injuries--93 scalp lacerations, 85 skull fractures, and 24 facial bone fractures; and 22 spine and spinal cord injuries--15 cervical and 7 thoracolumbar fractures. Seven of the 112 immediate survivors died; 4 of these deaths were related to severe head injuries. The treatment and outcome of survivors with neurological injuries is briefly described. One-third of the immediate survivors who suffered either a scalp laceration or a concussion had a concomitant skull fracture.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Language: en

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