2011
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-011-0424-0
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Brain Injuries from Blast

Abstract: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) from blast produces a number of conundrums. This review focuses on five fundamental questions including: (1) What are the physical correlates for blast TBI in humans? (2) Why is there limited evidence of traditional pulmonary injury from blast in current military field epidemiology? (3) What are the primary blast brain injury mechanisms in humans? (4) If TBI can present with clinical symptoms similar to those of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), how do we clinically differenti… Show more

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Cited by 173 publications
(175 citation statements)
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References 97 publications
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“…In our patient population, the oculomotor/BV deficits may point more to internal, organic damage as seen in TBI. If confirmed by future studies, oculomotor function measurements may prove helpful in establishing a history of TBI in some patients [33]. This is important because treatment methods vary between TBI, an organic injury, and PTSD, a psychiatric disorder [34].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…In our patient population, the oculomotor/BV deficits may point more to internal, organic damage as seen in TBI. If confirmed by future studies, oculomotor function measurements may prove helpful in establishing a history of TBI in some patients [33]. This is important because treatment methods vary between TBI, an organic injury, and PTSD, a psychiatric disorder [34].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…It is highly likely that cases of moderate to severe TBI resulted in medical treatment at a military facility, and the missed TBI cases are probably mTBI. Other potential contributors to possible underdiagnosis of mTBI include an incomplete appreciation of mTBI sequelae (including not fully considering TBI as a cause of psychiatric symptoms) and misperceptions of blast injury biomechanics, topics reviewed by the authors in 2012 that were addressed in a recent review article [56]. There are numerous complexities associated with both blast biomechanics and the challenges with accurately representing military or terrorist blast injury in the laboratory, and a full discussion of these topics is not within the scope of this article; interested readers may refer to our recent review cited previously [56].…”
Section: Diagnosis Of Tbi In Setting Of Ptsd or Other Psychiatric Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other potential contributors to possible underdiagnosis of mTBI include an incomplete appreciation of mTBI sequelae (including not fully considering TBI as a cause of psychiatric symptoms) and misperceptions of blast injury biomechanics, topics reviewed by the authors in 2012 that were addressed in a recent review article [56]. There are numerous complexities associated with both blast biomechanics and the challenges with accurately representing military or terrorist blast injury in the laboratory, and a full discussion of these topics is not within the scope of this article; interested readers may refer to our recent review cited previously [56]. The misperceptions of blast biomechanics are an important clinical factor in missed TBI diagnoses: blast injuries evaluated in a busy civilian trauma center resulted in a missed diagnosis rate of 36 percent of primary blast TBI cases [57].…”
Section: Diagnosis Of Tbi In Setting Of Ptsd or Other Psychiatric Comentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Second, with the exception of peak pressure, the waveform is relatively impervious to modulation and dependent on tube dimensions and animal placement. Third, there are important considerations with respect to the scale difference between human exposures and animal models (Bass et al 2011). A free-field blast wave may operate at 30-cm wavelength and have significant variation within the human body, including within the head region.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%