The flap by flap dissection in terminal ballistic applied to less lethal weapons

Medical examiners often have to solve questions such as firing distance and bullet trajectory for lethal weapons. Knowledge in the field of terminal ballistics has increased during the last 30 years and layer by layer dissection reveals superficial wounds that can be linked with the permanent cavity...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology 2011-06, Vol.32 (2), p.149-152
Hauptverfasser: de Freminville, Humbert, Rongieras, Fréderic, Prat, Nicolas, Voiglio, Eric J
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container_title The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology
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creator de Freminville, Humbert
Rongieras, Fréderic
Prat, Nicolas
Voiglio, Eric J
description Medical examiners often have to solve questions such as firing distance and bullet trajectory for lethal weapons. Knowledge in the field of terminal ballistics has increased during the last 30 years and layer by layer dissection reveals superficial wounds that can be linked with the permanent cavity. At the end of the 1990s, terminal ballistics also focused on less lethal weapons and their wounds. Here, 2 different less lethal weapons with single bullets were tested on nonembalmed and undressed cadavers (N = 26) at different ranges and speeds. We have developed a technique for dissection which we call flap by flap dissection that reveals the advantage of the bullet-skin-bone entity, the absence of wounds linking its components and range of less lethal weapons.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/PAF.0b013e3181d03eba
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subjects Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cadaver
Contusions - pathology
Dissection - methods
Female
Firearms
Forensic Ballistics
Fractures, Bone - pathology
Humans
Male
Rubber
Skin - injuries
Skin - pathology
Soft Tissue Injuries - pathology
Wounds, Nonpenetrating - pathology
title The flap by flap dissection in terminal ballistic applied to less lethal weapons
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