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Journal Article

Citation

Sefrin P, Kuhnigk H, Koburg R. Anasthesiol. Intensivmed. Notfallmed. Schmerzther. 2004; 39(11): 662-667.

Vernacular Title

Verletzungen airbaggeschutzter PKW-Insassen.

Affiliation

Klinik und Poliklinik fur Anasthesiologie, Sektion fur Praklinische Notfallmedizin der Universitat Wurzburg. Sefrin_P@klinik.uni-wuerzburg.de.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Georg Thieme Verlag)

DOI

10.1055/s-2004-825951

PMID

15523579

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The air bag, like the seatbelt, is a further development of the inside protection of motorcar passengers. However, the airbag has also been made responsible for severe internal injuries. METHODS: In a retrospective case control study, 394 accidents in which the air bag was released were analysed. At least medium severe injuries (Maximum Abbreviated Injury Scale: MAIS >/= 2) occurred in 69 cases. Three different patterns of injury were distinguished depending on the level of difficulty of diagnosis by the emergency physician. Damage to the vehicles was scored in five intensities or damage grades. RESULTS: Thoracic injury was most frequently diagnosed in the patients (in 61.5 % of cases), followed by injuries to the lower (50.8 %) and upper extremities (47.7 %). Single injuries with a grade of severity of 2 (MAIS) predominated (59.7 %). In most of the cases the injury was easy to diagnose (64.6 %) because of external signs, in 24.6 % internal injuries were assumed and in only 10.8 % were there no sings of damage to body cavities. Most frequent were occult injuries in the thoracic region (100 %) and in the abdomen (74.4 %). However, occult injuries did not always conform to the grade of deformation to the vehicle, since in 66.7 % the grade of damage was 3. This was not true for the remaining types of injury because external injuries increased with the grade of damage to the vehicle. CONCLUSION: After the release of the air bag, occult injuries of the body cavities have to be expected, even if there are no signs of external injury. Women under 35 years of age are particularly endangered. There exists no minimum velocity for the occurrence of injuries to the body cavities because harm can simply be a result of the release of the air bag.

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