نتایج جستجو برای: war injury

تعداد نتایج: 368048  

2014
S. Krisztian Kovacs Fabio Leonessa Geoffrey S. F. Ling

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) due to explosive blast exposure is a leading combat casualty. It is also implicated as a key contributor to war related mental health diseases. A clinically important consequence of all types of TBI is a high risk for development of seizures and epilepsy. Seizures have been reported in patients who have suffered blast injuries in the Global War on Terror but the exa...

Journal: :The American journal of psychiatry 2007
Edgar Jones Nicola T Fear Simon Wessely

Mild traumatic brain injury is now claimed to be the signature injury of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. During World War I, shell shock came to occupy a similar position of prominence, and postconcussional syndrome assumed some importance in World War II. In this article, the nature of shell shock, its clinical presentation, the military context, hypotheses of causation, and issues of mana...

2012
John Russell Silver

which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Spinal injuries have been known since antiquity and until the 20 th century, carried an inevitable fatal prognosis. Patients died either immediately from their intercurrent injuries and acute fulminating urinary tract infections, or they died in the following weeks from ch...

2017
John Hedley-Whyte Debra R. Milamed

At 3:15 AM on 27th April 1941, Pilot Officer Christopher Carmichael of 502 Squadron took Whitley aircraft Z6501 to roll out on Limavady’s partially completed airfield. A crew of 6, including Pilot Officer Christopher Carmichael, Flight Lieutenant John Dickson, Sergeant Desmond “Des” O’Connell, Sergeant Stanley William Dorney, Sergeant Fred Redhead, Sergeant John Wilson (Air Gunner) were schedul...

Journal: :Neurology India 2009
G D Satyarthee Sachin A Borkar Anuj Kumar Tripathi B S Sharma

Penetrating cranial injury is a potentially life-threatening condition. The majority of war injuries are high-velocity penetrating cranial injuries; but in civilian cases, most penetrating cranial wounds are low-velocity type. We report an interesting case of transorbital penetrating cranial injury with a knife-sharpening stone made up of ceramic in a 28-year-old male. The pertinent literature ...

Journal: :Military medicine 1993
C G Blood E D Gauker

Disease and non-battle injury (DNBI) rates were examined in conjunction with casualty rates across two Marine Corps operational scenarios, the assault on Okinawa and the Korean War. DNBI rates increased significantly with battle intensity among Marine infantry battalions involved in both operations. Highly significant positive correlations (p < 0.001) were evidenced between DNBI rate and wounde...

Journal: :European neurology 2014
Marie-France Weiner John Russell Silver

BACKGROUND It is widely acknowledged that Donald Munro in the United States (1936) and Ludwig Guttmann in the United Kingdom (1944) are the founders of the modern treatment of spinal injuries. However, Germany was the birthplace of neuropathology and led the field in neurology and psychiatry. The first effective spinal injury units were established by Wilhelm Wagner in Königshütte, Silesia and ...

Journal: :Annals of surgery 2011
Joseph M White Adam Stannard Gabriel E Burkhardt Brian J Eastridge Lorne H Blackbourne Todd E Rasmussen

BACKGROUND Blood vessel trauma leading to hemorrhage or ischemia presents a significant cause of morbidity and mortality after battlefield injury. The objective of this study is to characterize the epidemiology of vascular injury in the wars of Iraq and Afghanistan, including categorization of anatomic patterns, mechanism, and management of casualties. METHODS The Joint Theater Trauma Registr...

1943
G. T. Wrench

sir,?uenius is the grip upon first principles. Surprise, therefore, is not awakened, when the modern methods of treating war wounds throw a fresh light upon the genius of the greatest of surgeons and a man with every element of genius, Lord Lister. Lister won his first success with his antiseptic system in 1868 and in 1870 the Franco-German war broke out. Preceding this war there had been the C...

2016
Hatice Kaya Ozdogan Faruk Karateke Mehmet Ozdogan Sibel Cetinalp Sefa Ozyazici Yurdal Gezercan Ali Ihsan Okten Muge Celik Salim Satar

OBJECTIVE Since the civilian war in Syria began, thousands of seriously injured trauma patients from Syria were brought to Turkey for emergency operations and/or postoperative intensive care. The aim of this study was to present the demographics and clinical features of the wounded patients in Syrian civil war admitted to the surgical intensive care units in a tertiary care centre. METHODS Th...

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