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- Frederick M Burkle, Kevin S Hadley, Leah L Ridge, Jan K Herman, and Firas H Kobeissy.
- Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, Harvard University, and T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
- Mil Med. 2022 Jul 1; 187 (7-8): e926-e932.
IntroductionMuch of the research impacting diagnosis, outcome, and treatment of traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) has favored time of consciousness criteria indicative of hemispheric blast focus alone. However, recent animal-based research has widely expanded the diagnostic knowledge base and potential treatment options.MethodsRecent animal-based research findings of foramen magnum and occipital crest-focused blast injuries in laboratory rats were reviewed and compared to the Part I human case report.ResultsComparing the human case report (Part I) to that of animal research studies found very similar neuropathological outcomes, many deep and delayed, and supports why non-cerebral-focused TBIs have gone unrecognized. The overpressure wave is funneled through skull openings of the foramen magnum, with the possibility of a rebound secondary contrecoup injury impacting the orbits, oral-nasal cavity, and ears resulting in additional occult axonal and white matter injury.ConclusionsResearch analysis prompted by a human case report (Part I) has helped identify mechanisms that assist in recognizing and defining non-cerebral hemispheric-focused TBI injuries. Position of the head in relationship to the blast wave, the setting in which the blast occurs, and close diagnostic follow-up are critical to the recognition, diagnosis, and treatment of injuries that have otherwise gone unrecognized and unstudied in humans since the Vietnam War.© The Association of Military Surgeons of the United States 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
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