Clinics in laboratory medicine
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Explosions may have varied energy sources, reasons for occurring, and ways of injuring or killing. Careful analysis of the explosion scene, coupled with an equally careful examination of surgical or autopsy material as the result of an explosion, contributes greatly to the investigation. Surgical or autopsy material suspected of having been injured by explosion should be carefully photographed and x-rayed, swabbed with chloroform-soaked swabs, then swabs soaked in 0.1N hydrochloric acid, cleaned meticulously while collecting only surface fragments, photographed and x-rayed again, and then searched extensively for fragments.