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Wikipedia

Gunshot wound

A gunshot wound (GSW) is a penetrating injury caused by a projectile (e.g. a bullet) from a gun (typically firearm or air gun).[11][12] Damages may include bleeding, bone fractures, organ damage, wound infection, loss of the ability to move part of the body and, in more severe cases, death.[2] Damage depends on the part of the body hit, the path the bullet follows through the body, and the type and speed of the bullet.[12] Long-term complications can include bowel obstruction, failure to thrive, neurogenic bladder and paralysis, recurrent cardiorespiratory distress and pneumothorax, hypoxic brain injury leading to early dementia, amputations, chronic pain and pain with light touch (hyperalgesia), deep venous thrombosis with pulmonary embolus, limb swelling and debility, lead poisoning, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).[1][2][13]

Gunshot wound
Male skull showing bullet exit wound on parietal bone, 1950s
SpecialtyTrauma surgery
SymptomsPain, deformity, bleeding[1][2]
ComplicationsPTSD, lead poisoning, nerve injury,[1][2][3] wound infection, sepsis, brain damage, gangrene, disability, amputation[4]
CausesGuns
Risk factorsIllegal drug trade, ignorance of firearm safety, substance misuse including alcohol, mental health problems, firearm laws, social and economic differences, some occupations[5][6]
PreventionFirearm safety, not being involved in crime[7][8]
TreatmentTrauma care[9]
Frequency1 million (interpersonal violence in 2015)[10]
Deaths251,000 (2016)[5]

Factors that determine rates of gun violence vary by country.[5] These factors may include the illegal drug trade, easy access to firearms, substance misuse including alcohol, mental health problems, firearm laws, social attitudes, economic differences and occupations such as being a police officer.[5][6] Where guns are more common, altercations more often end in death.[14]

Before management begins it should be verified the area is safe.[9] This is followed by stopping major bleeding, then assessing and supporting the airway, breathing, and circulation.[9] Firearm laws, particularly background checks and permit to purchase, decrease the risk of death from firearms.[7] Safer firearm storage may decrease the risk of firearm-related deaths in children.[8]

In 2015, about a million gunshot wounds occurred from interpersonal violence.[10] In 2016, firearms resulted in 251,000 deaths globally, up from 209,000 in 1990.[5] Of these deaths 161,000 (64%) were the result of assault, 67,500 (27%) were the result of suicide, and 23,000 (9%) were accidents.[5] In the United States, guns resulted in about 40,000 deaths in 2017.[15] Firearm-related deaths are most common in males between the ages of 20 to 24 years.[5] Economic costs due to gunshot wounds have been estimated at US$140 billion a year in the United States.[16]

Signs and symptoms

Trauma from a gunshot wound varies widely based on the bullet, velocity, mass, entry point, trajectory, affected anatomy, and exit point. Gunshot wounds can be particularly devastating compared to other penetrating injuries because the trajectory and fragmentation of bullets can be unpredictable after entry. Moreover, gunshot wounds typically involve a large degree of nearby tissue disruption and destruction caused by the physical effects of the projectile correlated with the bullet velocity classification.[17]

The immediate damaging effect of a gunshot wound is typically severe bleeding with the potential for hypovolemic shock, a condition characterized by inadequate delivery of oxygen to vital organs.[18] In the case of traumatic hypovolemic shock, this failure of adequate oxygen delivery is due to blood loss, as blood is the means of delivering oxygen to the body's constituent parts. Devastating effects can result when a bullet strikes a vital organ such as the heart, lungs, or liver, or damages a component of the central nervous system such as the spinal cord or brain.[18]

Common causes of death following gunshot injury include bleeding, low oxygen caused by pneumothorax, catastrophic injury to the heart and major blood vessels, and damage to the brain or central nervous system. Non-fatal gunshot wounds frequently have mild to severe long-lasting effects, typically some form of major disfigurement such as amputation because of a severe bone fracture and may cause permanent disability. A sudden blood gush may take effect immediately from a gunshot wound if a bullet directly damages larger blood vessels, especially arteries.

Pathophysiology

 
Femur shot with a .58 caliber Minié ball
 
Femur shot with a 5.56 mm bullet

The degree of tissue disruption caused by a projectile is related to the cavitation the projectile creates as it passes through tissue. A bullet with sufficient energy will have a cavitation effect in addition to the penetrating track injury. As the bullet passes through the tissue, initially crushing then lacerating, the space left forms a cavity; this is called the permanent cavity. Higher-velocity bullets create a pressure wave that forces the tissues away, creating not only a permanent cavity the size of the caliber of the bullet but a temporary cavity or secondary cavity, which is often many times larger than the bullet itself.[19] The temporary cavity is the radial stretching of tissue around the bullet's wound track, which momentarily leaves an empty space caused by high pressures surrounding the projectile that accelerate material away from its path.[18] The extent of cavitation, in turn, is related to the following characteristics of the projectile:

  • Kinetic energy: KE = 1/2mv2 (where m is mass and v is velocity). This helps to explain why wounds produced by projectiles of higher mass and/or higher velocity produce greater tissue disruption than projectiles of lower mass and velocity. The velocity of the bullet is a more important determinant of tissue injury. Although both mass and velocity contribute to the overall energy of the projectile, the energy is proportional to the mass while proportional to the square of its velocity. As a result, for constant velocity, if the mass is doubled, the energy is doubled; however, if the velocity of the bullet is doubled, the energy increases four times. The initial velocity of a bullet is largely dependent on the firearm. The US military commonly uses 5.56-mm bullets, which have a relatively low mass as compared with other bullets; however, the speed of these bullets is relatively fast. As a result, they produce a larger amount of kinetic energy, which is transmitted to the tissues of the target.[19][20] The size of the temporary cavity is approximately proportional to the kinetic energy of the bullet and depends on the resistance of the tissue to stress.[18] Muzzle energy, which is based on muzzle velocity, is often used for ease of comparison.
  • Yaw: Handgun bullets will generally travel in a relatively straight line or make one turn if a bone is hit. Upon travel through deeper tissue, high-energy rounds may become unstable as they decelerate, and may tumble (pitch and yaw) as the energy of the projectile is absorbed, causing stretching and tearing of the surrounding tissue.[19]
  • Fragmentation: Most commonly, bullets do not fragment, and secondary damage from fragments of shattered bone is a more common complication than bullet fragments.[19]

Diagnosis

Classification

Gunshot wounds are classified according to the speed of the projectile using the Gustilo open fracture classification:

  • Low-velocity: Less than 1,100 ft/s (335 m/s)

Low velocity wounds are typical of small caliber handguns and display wound patterns like Gustilo Anderson Type 1 or 2 wounds

  • Medium-velocity: Between 1,200 ft/s (366 m/s) and 2,000 ft/s (610 m/s)

These are more typical of shotgun blasts or higher caliber handguns like magnums. The risk of infection from these types of wounds can vary depending on the type and pattern of bullets fired as well as the distance from the firearm.

  • High-velocity: Between 2,000 ft/s (610 m/s) and 3,500 ft/s (1,067 m/s)

Usually caused by powerful assault or hunting rifles and usually display wound pattern similar to Gustilo Anderson Type 3 wounds. The risk of infection is especially high due to the large area of injury and destroyed tissue.[21]

Bullets from handguns are sometimes less than 1,000 ft/s (300 m/s) but with modern pistol loads, they usually are slightly above 1,000 ft/s (300 m/s), while bullets from most modern rifles exceed 2,500 ft/s (760 m/s). One recently developed class of firearm projectiles is the hyper-velocity bullet, such cartridges are usually either wildcats made for achieving such high speed or purpose-built factory ammunition with the same goal in mind. Examples of hyper velocity cartridges include the .220 Swift, .17 Remington and .17 Mach IV cartridges. The US military commonly uses 5.56mm bullets, which have a relatively low mass as compared with other bullets (40-62 grains); however, the speed of these bullets is relatively fast (approximately 2,800 ft/s (850 m/s), placing them in the high velocity category). As a result, they produce a larger amount of kinetic energy, which is transmitted to the tissues of the target.[19] However, one must remember that high kinetic energy does not necessarily equate to high stopping power, as incapacitation usually results from remote wounding effects such as bleeding, rather than raw energy transfer. High energy does indeed result in more tissue disruption, which plays a role in incapacitation, but other factors such as wound size and shot placement play as big of, if not a bigger role in stopping power and thus, effectiveness. Muzzle velocity does not consider the effect of aerodynamic drag on the flight of the bullet for the sake of ease of comparison.

Prevention

Medical organizations in the United States recommend a criminal background check being held before a person buys a gun and that a person who has convictions for crimes of violence should not be permitted to buy a gun.[15] Safe storage of firearms is recommended, as well as better mental health care and removal of guns from those at risk of suicide.[15] In an effort to prevent mass shootings, greater regulations on guns that can rapidly fire many bullets is recommended.[15]

Management

Initial assessment for a gunshot wound is approached in the same way as other acute trauma using the advanced trauma life support (ATLS) protocol.[22] These include:

  • A) Airway - Assess and protect airway and potentially the cervical spine
  • B) Breathing - Maintain adequate ventilation and oxygenation
  • C) Circulation - Assess for and control bleeding to maintain organ perfusion including focused assessment with sonography for trauma (FAST)
  • D) Disability - Perform basic neurological exam including Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
  • E) Exposure - Expose entire body and search for any missed injuries, entry points, and exit points while maintaining body temperature

Depending on the extent of injury, management can range from urgent surgical intervention to observation. As such, any history from the scene such as gun type, shots fired, shot direction and distance, blood loss on scene, and pre-hospital vitals signs can be very helpful in directing management. Unstable people with signs of bleeding that cannot be controlled during the initial evaluation require immediate surgical exploration in the operating room.[22] Otherwise, management protocols are generally dictated by anatomic entry point and anticipated trajectory.

Neck

 
Penetrating neck injury protocol[23]

A gunshot wound to the neck can be particularly dangerous because of the high number of vital anatomical structures contained within a small space. The neck contains the larynx, trachea, pharynx, esophagus, vasculature (carotid, subclavian, and vertebral arteries; jugular, brachiocephalic, and vertebral veins; thyroid vessels), and nervous system anatomy (spinal cord, cranial nerves, peripheral nerves, sympathetic chain, brachial plexus). Gunshots to the neck can thus cause severe bleeding, airway compromise, and nervous system injury.[24]

Initial assessment of a gunshot wound to the neck involves non-probing inspection of whether the injury is a penetrating neck injury (PNI), classified by violation of the platysma muscle.[24] If the platysma is intact, the wound is considered superficial and only requires local wound care. If the injury is a PNI, surgery should be consulted immediately while the case is being managed. Of note, wounds should not be explored on the field or in the emergency department given the risk of exacerbating the wound.

Due to the advances in diagnostic imaging, management of PNI has been shifting from a "zone-based" approach, which uses anatomical site of injury to guide decisions, to a "no-zone" approach which uses a symptom-based algorithm.[25] The no-zone approach uses a hard signs and imaging system to guide next steps. Hard signs include airway compromise, unresponsive shock, diminished pulses, uncontrolled bleeding, expanding hematoma, bruits/thrill, air bubbling from wound or extensive subcutaneous air, stridor/hoarseness, neurological deficits.[25] If any hard signs are present, immediate surgical exploration and repair is pursued alongside airway and bleeding control. If there are no hard signs, the person receives a multi-detector CT angiography for better diagnosis. A directed angiography or endoscopy may be warranted in a high-risk trajectory for the gunshot. A positive finding on CT leads to operative exploration. If negative, the person may be observed with local wound care.[25]

Chest

Important anatomy in the chest includes the chest wall, ribs, spine, spinal cord, intercostal neurovascular bundles, lungs, bronchi, heart, aorta, major vessels, esophagus, thoracic duct, and diaphragm. Gunshots to the chest can thus cause severe bleeding (hemothorax), respiratory compromise (pneumothorax, hemothorax, pulmonary contusion, tracheobronchial injury), cardiac injury (pericardial tamponade), esophageal injury, and nervous system injury.[26]

Initial workup as outlined in the Workup section is particularly important with gunshot wounds to the chest because of the high risk for direct injury to the lungs, heart, and major vessels. Important notes for the initial workup specific for chest injuries are as follows. In people with pericardial tamponade or tension pneumothorax, the chest should be evacuated or decompressed if possible prior to attempting tracheal intubation because the positive pressure ventilation can cause hypotention or cardiovascular collapse.[27] Those with signs of a tension pneumothorax (asymmetric breathing, unstable blood flow, respiratory distress) should immediately receive a chest tube (> French 36) or needle decompression if chest tube placement is delayed.[27] FAST exam should include extended views into the chest to evaluate for hemopericardium, pneumothorax, hemothorax, and peritoneal fluid.[27]

Those with cardiac tamponade, uncontrolled bleeding, or a persistent air leak from a chest tube all require surgery.[28] Cardiac tamponade can be identified on FAST exam. Blood loss warranting surgery is 1–1.5 L of immediate chest tube drainage or ongoing bleeding of 200-300 mL/hr.[28][29] Persistent air leak is suggestive of tracheobronchial injury which will not heal without surgical intervention.[28] Depending on the severity of the person's condition and if cardiac arrest is recent or imminent, the person may require surgical intervention in the emergency department, otherwise known as an emergency department thoracotomy (EDT).[30]

However, not all gunshot to the chest require surgery. Asymptomatic people with a normal chest X-ray can be observed with a repeat exam and imaging after 6 hours to ensure no delayed development of pneumothorax or hemothorax.[27] If a person only has a pneumothorax or hemothorax, a chest tube is usually sufficient for management unless there is large volume bleeding or persistent air leak as noted above.[27] Additional imaging after initial chest X-ray and ultrasound can be useful in guiding next steps for stable people. Common imaging modalities include chest CT, formal echocardiography, angiography, esophagoscopy, esophagography, and bronchoscopy depending on the signs and symptoms.[31]

Abdomen

 
Abdominal gunshot wound

Important anatomy in the abdomen includes the stomach, small bowel, colon, liver, spleen, pancreas, kidneys, spine, diaphragm, descending aorta, and other abdominal vessels and nerves. Gunshots to the abdomen can thus cause severe bleeding, release of bowel contents, peritonitis, organ rupture, respiratory compromise, and neurological deficits.

The most important initial evaluation of a gunshot wound to the abdomen is whether there is uncontrolled bleeding, inflammation of the peritoneum, or spillage of bowel contents. If any of these are present, the person should be transferred immediately to the operating room for laparotomy.[32] If it is difficult to evaluate for those indications because the person is unresponsive or incomprehensible, it is up to the surgeon's discretion whether to pursue laparotomy, exploratory laparoscopy, or alternative investigative tools.

Although all people with abdominal gunshot wounds were taken to the operating room in the past, practice has shifted in recent years with the advances in imaging to non-operative approaches in more stable people.[33] If the person's vital signs are stable without indication for immediate surgery, imaging is done to determine the extent of injury.[33] Ultrasound (FAST) and help identify intra-abdominal bleeding and X-rays can help determine bullet trajectory and fragmentation.[33] However, the best and preferred mode of imaging is high-resolution multi-detector CT (MDCT) with IV, oral, and sometimes rectal contrast.[33] Severity of injury found on imaging will determine whether the surgeon takes an operative or close observational approach.

Diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) has become largely obsolete with the advances in MDCT, with use limited to centers without access to CT to guide requirement for urgent transfer for operation.[33]

Extremities

 
Acute penetrating trauma from a close-range shotgun blast injury to knee. Birdshot pellets are visible in the wound, within the shattered patella. The powder wad from the shotgun shell has been extracted from the wound, and is visible at the upper right of the image.

The four main components of extremities are bones, vessels, nerves, and soft tissues. Gunshot wounds can thus cause severe bleeding, fractures, nerve deficits, and soft tissue damage. The Mangled Extremity Severity Score (MESS) is used to classify the severity of injury and evaluates for severity of skeletal and/or soft tissue injury, limb ischemia, shock, and age.[34] Depending on the extent of injury, management can range from superficial wound care to limb amputation.

Vital sign stability and vascular assessment are the most important determinants of management in extremity injuries. As with other traumatic cases, those with uncontrolled bleeding require immediate surgical intervention.[22] If surgical intervention is not readily available and direct pressure is insufficient to control bleeding, tourniquets or direct clamping of visible vessels may be used temporarily to slow active bleeding.[35] People with hard signs of vascular injury also require immediate surgical intervention. Hard signs include active bleeding, expanding or pulsatile hematoma, bruit/thrill, absent distal pulses and signs of extremity ischemia.[36]

For stable people without hard signs of vascular injury, an injured extremity index (IEI) should be calculated by comparing the blood pressure in the injured limb compared to an uninjured limb in order to further evaluate for potential vascular injury.[37] If the IEI or clinical signs are suggestive of vascular injury, the person may undergo surgery or receive further imaging including CT angiography or conventional arteriography.

In addition to vascular management, people must be evaluated for bone, soft tissue, and nerve injury. Plain films can be used for fractures alongside CTs for soft tissue assessment. Fractures must be debrided and stabilized, nerves repaired when possible, and soft tissue debrided and covered.[38] This process can often require multiple procedures over time depending on the severity of injury.

Epidemiology

In 2015, about a million gunshot wounds occurred from interpersonal violence.[10] Firearms, globally in 2016, resulted in 251,000 deaths up from 209,000 in 1990.[5] Of these deaths 161,000 (64%) were the result of assault, 67,500 (27%) were the result of suicide, and 23,000 were accidents.[5] Firearm related deaths are most common in males between the ages of 20 to 24 years.[5]

The countries with the greatest number of deaths from firearms are Brazil, United States, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Guatemala, Bahamas and South Africa which make up just over half the total.[5] In the United States in 2015, about half of the 44,000 people who died by suicide did so with a gun.[39]

As of 2016, the countries with the highest rates of gun violence per capita were El Salvador, Venezuela, and Guatemala with 40.3, 34.8, and 26.8 violent gun deaths per 100,000 people respectively.[40] The countries with the lowest rates of were Singapore, Japan, and South Korea with 0.03, 0.04, and 0.05 violent gun deaths per 100,000 people respectively.[40]

Canada

In 2016, about 893 people died due to gunshot wounds in Canada (2.1 per 100,000).[5] About 80% were suicides, 12% were assaults, and 4% percent were accidents.[41]

United States

In 2017, there were 39,773 deaths in the United States as a result gunshot wounds.[15] Of these 60% were suicides, 37% were homicides, 1.4% were by law enforcement, 1.2% were accidents, and 0.9% were from an unknown cause.[15] This is up from 37,200 deaths in 2016 due to a gunshot wound (10.6 per 100,000).[5] With respect to those that pertain to interpersonal violence, it had the 31st highest rate in the world with 3.85 deaths per 100,000 people in 2016.[40] The majority of all homicides and suicides are firearm-related, and the majority of firearm-related deaths are the result of murder and suicide.[42] When sorted by GDP, however, the United States has a much higher violent gun death rate compared to other developed countries, with over 10 times the number of firearms assault deaths than the next four highest GDP countries combined.[43] Gunshot violence is the third most costly cause of injury and the fourth most expensive form of hospitalization in the United States.[44]

History

Until the 1880s, the standard practice for treating a gunshot wound called for physicians to insert their unsterilized fingers into the wound to probe and locate the path of the bullet.[45] Standard surgical theory such as opening abdominal cavities to repair gunshot wounds,[46] germ theory, and Joseph Lister's technique for antiseptic surgery using diluted carbolic acid, had not yet been accepted as standard practice. For example, sixteen doctors attended to President James A. Garfield after he was shot in 1881, and most probed the wound with their fingers or dirty instruments.[47] Historians agree that massive infection was a significant factor in Garfield's death.[45][48]

At almost the same time, in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, on 13 July 1881, George E. Goodfellow performed the first laparotomy to treat an abdominal gunshot wound.[49]: M-9  Goodfellow pioneered the use of sterile techniques in treating gunshot wounds,[50] washing the person's wound and his hands with lye soap or whisky, and his patient, unlike the President, recovered.[51] He became America's leading authority on gunshot wounds[52] and is credited as the United States' first civilian trauma surgeon.[53]

Mid-nineteenth-century handguns such as the Colt revolvers used during the American Civil War had muzzle velocities of just 230– /s and their powder and ball predecessors had velocities of 167 m/s or less. Unlike today's high-velocity bullets, nineteenth-century balls produced almost little or no cavitation and, being slower moving, they were liable to lodge in unusual locations at odds with their trajectory.[54]

Wilhelm Röntgen's discovery of X-rays in 1895 led to the use of radiographs to locate bullets in wounded soldiers.[55]

Survival rates for gunshot wounds improved among US military personnel during the Korean and Vietnam Wars, due in part to helicopter evacuation, along with improvements in resuscitation and battlefield medicine.[55][56] Similar improvements were seen in US trauma practices during the Iraq War.[57] Some military trauma care practices are disseminated by citizen soldiers who return to civilian practice.[55][58][59] One such practice is to transfer major trauma cases to an operating theater as soon as possible, to stop internal bleeding. Within the United States, the survival rate for gunshot wounds has increased, leading to apparent declines in the gun death rate in states that have stable rates of gunshot hospitalizations.[60][61][62][63]

Research

Research into gunshot wounds in the USA is hampered by lack of funding. Federal-funded research into firearm injury, epidemiology, violence, and prevention is minimal.

See also

  • Blast injury, an injury that may present similar dangers to a gunshot wound.
  • Bullet hit squib, the simulated equivalent of a gunshot wound used in the film industry to portray a gunshot wound.
  • Stab wound, an equivalent penetrating injury caused by a bladed weapon or any other sharp objects.

References

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External links

  • Virtual Autopsy – CT scans of fatal gunshot wounds
  • Patient.info

gunshot, wound, gunshot, wound, penetrating, injury, caused, projectile, bullet, from, typically, firearm, damages, include, bleeding, bone, fractures, organ, damage, wound, infection, loss, ability, move, part, body, more, severe, cases, death, damage, depend. A gunshot wound GSW is a penetrating injury caused by a projectile e g a bullet from a gun typically firearm or air gun 11 12 Damages may include bleeding bone fractures organ damage wound infection loss of the ability to move part of the body and in more severe cases death 2 Damage depends on the part of the body hit the path the bullet follows through the body and the type and speed of the bullet 12 Long term complications can include bowel obstruction failure to thrive neurogenic bladder and paralysis recurrent cardiorespiratory distress and pneumothorax hypoxic brain injury leading to early dementia amputations chronic pain and pain with light touch hyperalgesia deep venous thrombosis with pulmonary embolus limb swelling and debility lead poisoning and post traumatic stress disorder PTSD 1 2 13 Gunshot woundMale skull showing bullet exit wound on parietal bone 1950sSpecialtyTrauma surgerySymptomsPain deformity bleeding 1 2 ComplicationsPTSD lead poisoning nerve injury 1 2 3 wound infection sepsis brain damage gangrene disability amputation 4 CausesGunsRisk factorsIllegal drug trade ignorance of firearm safety substance misuse including alcohol mental health problems firearm laws social and economic differences some occupations 5 6 PreventionFirearm safety not being involved in crime 7 8 TreatmentTrauma care 9 Frequency1 million interpersonal violence in 2015 10 Deaths251 000 2016 5 Factors that determine rates of gun violence vary by country 5 These factors may include the illegal drug trade easy access to firearms substance misuse including alcohol mental health problems firearm laws social attitudes economic differences and occupations such as being a police officer 5 6 Where guns are more common altercations more often end in death 14 Before management begins it should be verified the area is safe 9 This is followed by stopping major bleeding then assessing and supporting the airway breathing and circulation 9 Firearm laws particularly background checks and permit to purchase decrease the risk of death from firearms 7 Safer firearm storage may decrease the risk of firearm related deaths in children 8 In 2015 about a million gunshot wounds occurred from interpersonal violence 10 In 2016 firearms resulted in 251 000 deaths globally up from 209 000 in 1990 5 Of these deaths 161 000 64 were the result of assault 67 500 27 were the result of suicide and 23 000 9 were accidents 5 In the United States guns resulted in about 40 000 deaths in 2017 15 Firearm related deaths are most common in males between the ages of 20 to 24 years 5 Economic costs due to gunshot wounds have been estimated at US 140 billion a year in the United States 16 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Pathophysiology 3 Diagnosis 3 1 Classification 4 Prevention 5 Management 5 1 Neck 5 2 Chest 5 3 Abdomen 5 4 Extremities 6 Epidemiology 6 1 Canada 6 2 United States 7 History 8 Research 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksSigns and symptoms EditTrauma from a gunshot wound varies widely based on the bullet velocity mass entry point trajectory affected anatomy and exit point Gunshot wounds can be particularly devastating compared to other penetrating injuries because the trajectory and fragmentation of bullets can be unpredictable after entry Moreover gunshot wounds typically involve a large degree of nearby tissue disruption and destruction caused by the physical effects of the projectile correlated with the bullet velocity classification 17 The immediate damaging effect of a gunshot wound is typically severe bleeding with the potential for hypovolemic shock a condition characterized by inadequate delivery of oxygen to vital organs 18 In the case of traumatic hypovolemic shock this failure of adequate oxygen delivery is due to blood loss as blood is the means of delivering oxygen to the body s constituent parts Devastating effects can result when a bullet strikes a vital organ such as the heart lungs or liver or damages a component of the central nervous system such as the spinal cord or brain 18 Common causes of death following gunshot injury include bleeding low oxygen caused by pneumothorax catastrophic injury to the heart and major blood vessels and damage to the brain or central nervous system Non fatal gunshot wounds frequently have mild to severe long lasting effects typically some form of major disfigurement such as amputation because of a severe bone fracture and may cause permanent disability A sudden blood gush may take effect immediately from a gunshot wound if a bullet directly damages larger blood vessels especially arteries Pathophysiology Edit Femur shot with a 58 caliber Minie ball Femur shot with a 5 56 mm bullet The degree of tissue disruption caused by a projectile is related to the cavitation the projectile creates as it passes through tissue A bullet with sufficient energy will have a cavitation effect in addition to the penetrating track injury As the bullet passes through the tissue initially crushing then lacerating the space left forms a cavity this is called the permanent cavity Higher velocity bullets create a pressure wave that forces the tissues away creating not only a permanent cavity the size of the caliber of the bullet but a temporary cavity or secondary cavity which is often many times larger than the bullet itself 19 The temporary cavity is the radial stretching of tissue around the bullet s wound track which momentarily leaves an empty space caused by high pressures surrounding the projectile that accelerate material away from its path 18 The extent of cavitation in turn is related to the following characteristics of the projectile Kinetic energy KE 1 2mv2 where m is mass and v is velocity This helps to explain why wounds produced by projectiles of higher mass and or higher velocity produce greater tissue disruption than projectiles of lower mass and velocity The velocity of the bullet is a more important determinant of tissue injury Although both mass and velocity contribute to the overall energy of the projectile the energy is proportional to the mass while proportional to the square of its velocity As a result for constant velocity if the mass is doubled the energy is doubled however if the velocity of the bullet is doubled the energy increases four times The initial velocity of a bullet is largely dependent on the firearm The US military commonly uses 5 56 mm bullets which have a relatively low mass as compared with other bullets however the speed of these bullets is relatively fast As a result they produce a larger amount of kinetic energy which is transmitted to the tissues of the target 19 20 The size of the temporary cavity is approximately proportional to the kinetic energy of the bullet and depends on the resistance of the tissue to stress 18 Muzzle energy which is based on muzzle velocity is often used for ease of comparison Yaw Handgun bullets will generally travel in a relatively straight line or make one turn if a bone is hit Upon travel through deeper tissue high energy rounds may become unstable as they decelerate and may tumble pitch and yaw as the energy of the projectile is absorbed causing stretching and tearing of the surrounding tissue 19 Fragmentation Most commonly bullets do not fragment and secondary damage from fragments of shattered bone is a more common complication than bullet fragments 19 Diagnosis EditClassification Edit Gunshot wounds are classified according to the speed of the projectile using the Gustilo open fracture classification Low velocity Less than 1 100 ft s 335 m s Low velocity wounds are typical of small caliber handguns and display wound patterns like Gustilo Anderson Type 1 or 2 wounds Medium velocity Between 1 200 ft s 366 m s and 2 000 ft s 610 m s These are more typical of shotgun blasts or higher caliber handguns like magnums The risk of infection from these types of wounds can vary depending on the type and pattern of bullets fired as well as the distance from the firearm High velocity Between 2 000 ft s 610 m s and 3 500 ft s 1 067 m s Usually caused by powerful assault or hunting rifles and usually display wound pattern similar to Gustilo Anderson Type 3 wounds The risk of infection is especially high due to the large area of injury and destroyed tissue 21 Bullets from handguns are sometimes less than 1 000 ft s 300 m s but with modern pistol loads they usually are slightly above 1 000 ft s 300 m s while bullets from most modern rifles exceed 2 500 ft s 760 m s One recently developed class of firearm projectiles is the hyper velocity bullet such cartridges are usually either wildcats made for achieving such high speed or purpose built factory ammunition with the same goal in mind Examples of hyper velocity cartridges include the 220 Swift 17 Remington and 17 Mach IV cartridges The US military commonly uses 5 56mm bullets which have a relatively low mass as compared with other bullets 40 62 grains however the speed of these bullets is relatively fast approximately 2 800 ft s 850 m s placing them in the high velocity category As a result they produce a larger amount of kinetic energy which is transmitted to the tissues of the target 19 However one must remember that high kinetic energy does not necessarily equate to high stopping power as incapacitation usually results from remote wounding effects such as bleeding rather than raw energy transfer High energy does indeed result in more tissue disruption which plays a role in incapacitation but other factors such as wound size and shot placement play as big of if not a bigger role in stopping power and thus effectiveness Muzzle velocity does not consider the effect of aerodynamic drag on the flight of the bullet for the sake of ease of comparison Prevention EditMedical organizations in the United States recommend a criminal background check being held before a person buys a gun and that a person who has convictions for crimes of violence should not be permitted to buy a gun 15 Safe storage of firearms is recommended as well as better mental health care and removal of guns from those at risk of suicide 15 In an effort to prevent mass shootings greater regulations on guns that can rapidly fire many bullets is recommended 15 Management EditInitial assessment for a gunshot wound is approached in the same way as other acute trauma using the advanced trauma life support ATLS protocol 22 These include A Airway Assess and protect airway and potentially the cervical spine B Breathing Maintain adequate ventilation and oxygenation C Circulation Assess for and control bleeding to maintain organ perfusion including focused assessment with sonography for trauma FAST D Disability Perform basic neurological exam including Glasgow Coma Scale GCS E Exposure Expose entire body and search for any missed injuries entry points and exit points while maintaining body temperatureDepending on the extent of injury management can range from urgent surgical intervention to observation As such any history from the scene such as gun type shots fired shot direction and distance blood loss on scene and pre hospital vitals signs can be very helpful in directing management Unstable people with signs of bleeding that cannot be controlled during the initial evaluation require immediate surgical exploration in the operating room 22 Otherwise management protocols are generally dictated by anatomic entry point and anticipated trajectory Neck Edit Penetrating neck injury protocol 23 A gunshot wound to the neck can be particularly dangerous because of the high number of vital anatomical structures contained within a small space The neck contains the larynx trachea pharynx esophagus vasculature carotid subclavian and vertebral arteries jugular brachiocephalic and vertebral veins thyroid vessels and nervous system anatomy spinal cord cranial nerves peripheral nerves sympathetic chain brachial plexus Gunshots to the neck can thus cause severe bleeding airway compromise and nervous system injury 24 Initial assessment of a gunshot wound to the neck involves non probing inspection of whether the injury is a penetrating neck injury PNI classified by violation of the platysma muscle 24 If the platysma is intact the wound is considered superficial and only requires local wound care If the injury is a PNI surgery should be consulted immediately while the case is being managed Of note wounds should not be explored on the field or in the emergency department given the risk of exacerbating the wound Due to the advances in diagnostic imaging management of PNI has been shifting from a zone based approach which uses anatomical site of injury to guide decisions to a no zone approach which uses a symptom based algorithm 25 The no zone approach uses a hard signs and imaging system to guide next steps Hard signs include airway compromise unresponsive shock diminished pulses uncontrolled bleeding expanding hematoma bruits thrill air bubbling from wound or extensive subcutaneous air stridor hoarseness neurological deficits 25 If any hard signs are present immediate surgical exploration and repair is pursued alongside airway and bleeding control If there are no hard signs the person receives a multi detector CT angiography for better diagnosis A directed angiography or endoscopy may be warranted in a high risk trajectory for the gunshot A positive finding on CT leads to operative exploration If negative the person may be observed with local wound care 25 Chest Edit Important anatomy in the chest includes the chest wall ribs spine spinal cord intercostal neurovascular bundles lungs bronchi heart aorta major vessels esophagus thoracic duct and diaphragm Gunshots to the chest can thus cause severe bleeding hemothorax respiratory compromise pneumothorax hemothorax pulmonary contusion tracheobronchial injury cardiac injury pericardial tamponade esophageal injury and nervous system injury 26 Initial workup as outlined in the Workup section is particularly important with gunshot wounds to the chest because of the high risk for direct injury to the lungs heart and major vessels Important notes for the initial workup specific for chest injuries are as follows In people with pericardial tamponade or tension pneumothorax the chest should be evacuated or decompressed if possible prior to attempting tracheal intubation because the positive pressure ventilation can cause hypotention or cardiovascular collapse 27 Those with signs of a tension pneumothorax asymmetric breathing unstable blood flow respiratory distress should immediately receive a chest tube gt French 36 or needle decompression if chest tube placement is delayed 27 FAST exam should include extended views into the chest to evaluate for hemopericardium pneumothorax hemothorax and peritoneal fluid 27 Those with cardiac tamponade uncontrolled bleeding or a persistent air leak from a chest tube all require surgery 28 Cardiac tamponade can be identified on FAST exam Blood loss warranting surgery is 1 1 5 L of immediate chest tube drainage or ongoing bleeding of 200 300 mL hr 28 29 Persistent air leak is suggestive of tracheobronchial injury which will not heal without surgical intervention 28 Depending on the severity of the person s condition and if cardiac arrest is recent or imminent the person may require surgical intervention in the emergency department otherwise known as an emergency department thoracotomy EDT 30 However not all gunshot to the chest require surgery Asymptomatic people with a normal chest X ray can be observed with a repeat exam and imaging after 6 hours to ensure no delayed development of pneumothorax or hemothorax 27 If a person only has a pneumothorax or hemothorax a chest tube is usually sufficient for management unless there is large volume bleeding or persistent air leak as noted above 27 Additional imaging after initial chest X ray and ultrasound can be useful in guiding next steps for stable people Common imaging modalities include chest CT formal echocardiography angiography esophagoscopy esophagography and bronchoscopy depending on the signs and symptoms 31 Abdomen Edit Abdominal gunshot wound Important anatomy in the abdomen includes the stomach small bowel colon liver spleen pancreas kidneys spine diaphragm descending aorta and other abdominal vessels and nerves Gunshots to the abdomen can thus cause severe bleeding release of bowel contents peritonitis organ rupture respiratory compromise and neurological deficits The most important initial evaluation of a gunshot wound to the abdomen is whether there is uncontrolled bleeding inflammation of the peritoneum or spillage of bowel contents If any of these are present the person should be transferred immediately to the operating room for laparotomy 32 If it is difficult to evaluate for those indications because the person is unresponsive or incomprehensible it is up to the surgeon s discretion whether to pursue laparotomy exploratory laparoscopy or alternative investigative tools Although all people with abdominal gunshot wounds were taken to the operating room in the past practice has shifted in recent years with the advances in imaging to non operative approaches in more stable people 33 If the person s vital signs are stable without indication for immediate surgery imaging is done to determine the extent of injury 33 Ultrasound FAST and help identify intra abdominal bleeding and X rays can help determine bullet trajectory and fragmentation 33 However the best and preferred mode of imaging is high resolution multi detector CT MDCT with IV oral and sometimes rectal contrast 33 Severity of injury found on imaging will determine whether the surgeon takes an operative or close observational approach Diagnostic peritoneal lavage DPL has become largely obsolete with the advances in MDCT with use limited to centers without access to CT to guide requirement for urgent transfer for operation 33 Extremities Edit Acute penetrating trauma from a close range shotgun blast injury to knee Birdshot pellets are visible in the wound within the shattered patella The powder wad from the shotgun shell has been extracted from the wound and is visible at the upper right of the image The four main components of extremities are bones vessels nerves and soft tissues Gunshot wounds can thus cause severe bleeding fractures nerve deficits and soft tissue damage The Mangled Extremity Severity Score MESS is used to classify the severity of injury and evaluates for severity of skeletal and or soft tissue injury limb ischemia shock and age 34 Depending on the extent of injury management can range from superficial wound care to limb amputation Vital sign stability and vascular assessment are the most important determinants of management in extremity injuries As with other traumatic cases those with uncontrolled bleeding require immediate surgical intervention 22 If surgical intervention is not readily available and direct pressure is insufficient to control bleeding tourniquets or direct clamping of visible vessels may be used temporarily to slow active bleeding 35 People with hard signs of vascular injury also require immediate surgical intervention Hard signs include active bleeding expanding or pulsatile hematoma bruit thrill absent distal pulses and signs of extremity ischemia 36 For stable people without hard signs of vascular injury an injured extremity index IEI should be calculated by comparing the blood pressure in the injured limb compared to an uninjured limb in order to further evaluate for potential vascular injury 37 If the IEI or clinical signs are suggestive of vascular injury the person may undergo surgery or receive further imaging including CT angiography or conventional arteriography In addition to vascular management people must be evaluated for bone soft tissue and nerve injury Plain films can be used for fractures alongside CTs for soft tissue assessment Fractures must be debrided and stabilized nerves repaired when possible and soft tissue debrided and covered 38 This process can often require multiple procedures over time depending on the severity of injury Epidemiology EditFurther information List of countries by firearm related death rate In 2015 about a million gunshot wounds occurred from interpersonal violence 10 Firearms globally in 2016 resulted in 251 000 deaths up from 209 000 in 1990 5 Of these deaths 161 000 64 were the result of assault 67 500 27 were the result of suicide and 23 000 were accidents 5 Firearm related deaths are most common in males between the ages of 20 to 24 years 5 The countries with the greatest number of deaths from firearms are Brazil United States Mexico Colombia Venezuela Guatemala Bahamas and South Africa which make up just over half the total 5 In the United States in 2015 about half of the 44 000 people who died by suicide did so with a gun 39 As of 2016 the countries with the highest rates of gun violence per capita were El Salvador Venezuela and Guatemala with 40 3 34 8 and 26 8 violent gun deaths per 100 000 people respectively 40 The countries with the lowest rates of were Singapore Japan and South Korea with 0 03 0 04 and 0 05 violent gun deaths per 100 000 people respectively 40 Canada Edit In 2016 about 893 people died due to gunshot wounds in Canada 2 1 per 100 000 5 About 80 were suicides 12 were assaults and 4 percent were accidents 41 United States Edit Further information Gun violence in the United States In 2017 there were 39 773 deaths in the United States as a result gunshot wounds 15 Of these 60 were suicides 37 were homicides 1 4 were by law enforcement 1 2 were accidents and 0 9 were from an unknown cause 15 This is up from 37 200 deaths in 2016 due to a gunshot wound 10 6 per 100 000 5 With respect to those that pertain to interpersonal violence it had the 31st highest rate in the world with 3 85 deaths per 100 000 people in 2016 40 The majority of all homicides and suicides are firearm related and the majority of firearm related deaths are the result of murder and suicide 42 When sorted by GDP however the United States has a much higher violent gun death rate compared to other developed countries with over 10 times the number of firearms assault deaths than the next four highest GDP countries combined 43 Gunshot violence is the third most costly cause of injury and the fourth most expensive form of hospitalization in the United States 44 History EditUntil the 1880s the standard practice for treating a gunshot wound called for physicians to insert their unsterilized fingers into the wound to probe and locate the path of the bullet 45 Standard surgical theory such as opening abdominal cavities to repair gunshot wounds 46 germ theory and Joseph Lister s technique for antiseptic surgery using diluted carbolic acid had not yet been accepted as standard practice For example sixteen doctors attended to President James A Garfield after he was shot in 1881 and most probed the wound with their fingers or dirty instruments 47 Historians agree that massive infection was a significant factor in Garfield s death 45 48 At almost the same time in Tombstone Arizona Territory on 13 July 1881 George E Goodfellow performed the first laparotomy to treat an abdominal gunshot wound 49 M 9 Goodfellow pioneered the use of sterile techniques in treating gunshot wounds 50 washing the person s wound and his hands with lye soap or whisky and his patient unlike the President recovered 51 He became America s leading authority on gunshot wounds 52 and is credited as the United States first civilian trauma surgeon 53 Mid nineteenth century handguns such as the Colt revolvers used during the American Civil War had muzzle velocities of just 230 s and their powder and ball predecessors had velocities of 167 m s or less Unlike today s high velocity bullets nineteenth century balls produced almost little or no cavitation and being slower moving they were liable to lodge in unusual locations at odds with their trajectory 54 Wilhelm Rontgen s discovery of X rays in 1895 led to the use of radiographs to locate bullets in wounded soldiers 55 Survival rates for gunshot wounds improved among US military personnel during the Korean and Vietnam Wars due in part to helicopter evacuation along with improvements in resuscitation and battlefield medicine 55 56 Similar improvements were seen in US trauma practices during the Iraq War 57 Some military trauma care practices are disseminated by citizen soldiers who return to civilian practice 55 58 59 One such practice is to transfer major trauma cases to an operating theater as soon as possible to stop internal bleeding Within the United States the survival rate for gunshot wounds has increased leading to apparent declines in the gun death rate in states that have stable rates of gunshot hospitalizations 60 61 62 63 Research EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Research into gunshot wounds in the USA is hampered by lack of funding Federal funded research into firearm injury epidemiology violence and prevention is minimal See also EditBlast injury an injury that may present similar dangers to a gunshot wound Bullet hit squib the simulated equivalent of a gunshot wound used in the film industry to portray a gunshot wound Stab wound an equivalent penetrating injury caused by a bladed weapon or any other sharp objects References Edit a b c Gun Shot Wounds Trauma Orthobullets www orthobullets com Retrieved 13 July 2019 a b c d Gunshot wounds aftercare MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia medlineplus gov Retrieved 13 July 2019 Stein JS Strauss E January 1995 Gunshot wounds to the upper extremity Evaluation and management of vascular injuries The Orthopedic Clinics of North America 26 1 29 35 doi 10 1016 S0030 5898 20 31965 9 PMID 7838501 Nair R Abdool Carrim A T Robbs J V 2000 Gunshot injuries of the popliteal artery Nair 2000 BJS Wiley Online Library The British Journal of Surgery 87 5 602 7 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2168 2000 01397 x PMID 10792317 S2CID 8418598 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Global Burden of Disease 2016 Injury Collaborators Naghavi M Marczak LB 28 August 2018 Global Mortality From Firearms 1990 2016 JAMA 320 8 792 814 doi 10 1001 jama 2018 10060 PMC 6143020 PMID 30167700 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a first1 has generic name help a b Branas CC Han S Wiebe DJ 2016 Alcohol Use and Firearm Violence Epidemiologic Reviews 38 1 32 45 doi 10 1093 epirev mxv010 PMC 4762248 PMID 26811427 a b Lee LK Fleegler EW Farrell C Avakame E Srinivasan S Hemenway D Monuteaux MC 1 January 2017 Firearm Laws and Firearm Homicides A Systematic Review JAMA Internal Medicine 177 1 106 119 doi 10 1001 jamainternmed 2016 7051 PMID 27842178 S2CID 205119294 a b Santaella Tenorio J Cerda M Villaveces A 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