Explosion Injuries: Blast Basics - Explosive Entrée
- Explosion: Rapid chemical conversion (solid/liquid → gas); sudden ↑volume & ↑pressure.
- Types of Explosives:
- Low-Order (LOE): Deflagration (subsonic).
- E.g., Gunpowder. "Pushing" effect.
- High-Order (HOE): Detonation (supersonic).
- E.g., TNT, RDX. "Shattering" (brisance) effect.
- Low-Order (LOE): Deflagration (subsonic).
- Blast Wave Components:
- Shock Front: Abrupt pressure ↑.
- Blast Wind: High-velocity air.

- Blast Wave Phases:
- Positive: Pressure > ambient.
- Negative: Pressure < ambient (suction). ⭐ > The negative pressure phase lasts much longer (e.g., 3-10x) than the positive phase, causing significant displacement and secondary injuries.
Blast Injury Mechanisms - The Blast Wave's Wrath
Explosions generate a supersonic blast wave, causing complex multi-system injuries through distinct mechanisms.
- Primary: Direct barotrauma from overpressure wave.
- Affects gas-filled organs: Lungs (blast lung - edema, contusion, hemorrhage), Ears (TM rupture - most common injury), GI tract (perforation, hemorrhage).
- Mechanisms: Spallation, implosion, inertial effects.
- Secondary: Penetrating trauma from energized fragments, debris.
- Injuries: Lacerations, fractures, penetrating injuries.
- Tertiary: Victim displacement by blast wind, causing impact injuries.
- Injuries: Blunt trauma, fractures (esp. skull, long bones), head injuries.
- Quaternary: All other explosion-related injuries.
- Examples: Burns (flash, flame), crush injuries, asphyxia, toxic exposures, exacerbation of chronic conditions.
- Quinary: Effects of additives (e.g., bacteria, chemicals) or resultant hyperinflammatory state.
⭐ Tympanic membrane (TM) rupture is the most common overall primary blast injury and can serve as an indicator of blast exposure intensity for triage purposes.
Organ-Specific Blast Injuries - Systemic Shakedown
- Lungs (Blast Lung): Most common death cause (initial survivors).
- Patho: Alveolar-capillary disruption, hemorrhage, edema, air embolism.
- CXR: "Butterfly"/"Batwing" opacities.
- Auditory: Most common overall injury.
- TM rupture: Most frequent, sensitive.
- Symptoms: Hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo.
- Gastrointestinal: 2nd most common death cause.
- Affects gas-filled organs (colon).
- Patho: Contusion, hemorrhage, perforation, ischemia.
- CNS:
- Primary: Blast wave → concussion, TBI.
- Secondary/Tertiary: Penetrating/blunt trauma.
- Cardiovascular:
- Myocardial contusion, arrhythmias.
- Air embolism risk (coronary/cerebral).
- Ocular:
- Globe rupture, hyphema, retinal detachment, FBs.

- Globe rupture, hyphema, retinal detachment, FBs.
⭐ Tympanic membrane (TM) is most sensitive to blast; TM rupture is the most common single blast injury.
Forensic Autopsy & MLA - Post-Blast Pointers
- Autopsy Objectives: Victim ID, COD (Cause of Death), MOD (Manner of Death), evidence.
- External Findings:
- Blast wave injuries (e.g., abrasions, contusions).
- Shrapnel wounds (penetrating/perforating).
- Burns (flash/flame), traumatic amputations.
- Debris/soot tattooing.
- Internal Findings:
- Blast lung (hemorrhage, edema).
- GI perforations, mesenteric hemorrhage.
- Tympanic membrane rupture.
- Evidence: Meticulous collection of fragments, residues, clothing.
- Medico-Legal Aspects (MLA):
- Detailed documentation, photography.
- Strict chain of custody.
⭐ Air embolism in coronary/cerebral vessels is a critical finding, often indicating primary blast effect.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Primary blast injuries from overpressure (blast wave) affect air-filled organs; tympanic membrane rupture is a key indicator.
- Secondary blast injuries are caused by flying debris and projectiles, leading to penetrating trauma.
- Tertiary blast injuries occur when the body is thrown, resulting in blunt force trauma and fractures.
- Quaternary blast injuries encompass all other effects like burns, crush injuries, and toxic exposures.
- Quinary blast injuries are caused by post-detonation environmental contaminants like bacteria, radiation from dirty bombs, and tissue reactions to fuel and metal residues.
- Blast lung is the most common fatal primary blast injury, characterized by hemorrhage and edema.
- Air embolism is a critical and often lethal complication, particularly following blast lung injury.
- Middle ear damage, including ossicular disruption, is frequent even with low-level blast exposure.
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