A Military Case Review Method to Determine and Record the Mechanism of Injury (BioTab) from In-Theater Attacks

Author:

Danelson Kerry A12,Frounfelker Patricia3,Pizzolato-Heine Karen3,Valentine Raymond3,Watkins Laura C12,Tegtmeyer Michael4,Bolte John H5,Hardy Warren N2,Loftis Kathryn L3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Wake Forest School of Medicine, 1 Medical Center Blvd, Winston Salem, NC

2. VT/WFU School of Biomedical Engineering and Sciences, 440 Kelly Hall, 325 Stanger St, Blacksburg, VA

3. U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Survivability/Lethality Analysis Directorate, 328 Hopkins Rd, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD

4. U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Weapons and Materials Research – Protection Division, 328 Hopkins Rd, APG, MD

5. Injury Biomechanics Research Center, The Ohio State University, 2063 Graves Hall, 333 W. 10th Avenue, Columbus, OH

Abstract

Abstract A recent study of all mounted vehicle underbody blast attacks found that 21% of Abbreviated Injury Scale Severity 2+ injuries in the Joint Trauma Analysis and Prevention of Injury in Combat network were injuries to the leg and ankle. To develop effective countermeasure systems for these attacks, the epidemiology and mechanisms of injury from this loading environment need to be quantified. The goal of this study was to develop a military correlate of an existing civilian case review framework, the Crash Injury Research and Engineering Network (CIREN), to consider the differences in military event types and the amount of available vehicle/attack information. Additional data fields were added to the CIREN process to cover military-specific data and “certainty” definitions in the proposed injury hypothesis were modified. To date, six group reviews have been conducted analyzing 253 injuries to the foot/ankle, tibia, femur, pelvis, and lumbar spine from 52 occupants. The familiar format and unclassified nature of the presentations allowed for the involvement of biomechanics experts from multiple disciplines.

Funder

Army Research Laboratory

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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