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Journal Article

Citation

Carey ME, Sacco WJ, Merkler J. Acta Chir. Scand. Suppl. 1982; 508: 351-356.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1982, P A Norstedt Soner)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

6952699

Abstract

Analysis of data obtained from U.S. military personnel who received either a lethal or non-lethal brain or head wound in Vietnam indicate that: 1. Bullets caused more fatal brain wounds that did fragments. 2. Most bullet wounds were received at close range, 40.9 m average. Most fatal fragment wounds to the brain occurred at a very close range, 2.9 m average. 3. Clinically significant intracranial blood clots occurred in only 7% of all fatal brain wounds. Only one man with a non fatal brain wound had an associated clot, 3.3%. 4. Helmets offered no protection against bullets but gave significant protection against fragments. 5. Men who sustained either fetal or non fatal brain wounds became immediately militarily non effective.

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