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Simulating backspatter of blood from cranial gunshot wounds using pig models

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 03:36 authored by G. Radford, Michael Taylor, J Kieser, J. Waddell, Kevan Walsh, J. Schofield, Rajarshi DasRajarshi Das, E. Chakravorty
Few studies have examined the biomechanical basis for backspatter from cranial gunshot wounds. Backspatter is material which travels against the direction of fire following ejection from a gunshot entrance wound. Our paper focuses on the use of animals for reconstructing this phenomenon. Five live pigs and several slaughtered pigs were shot using either 9 × 19 mm, 115 grain, full metal jacketed ammunition or.22 long rifle, 40 grain, lead, round-nose ammunition. A high-speed camera was used to record the entrance wound formation and backspatter. A small amount of backspattered material was produced with all targets, and blood backspatter was seen in a few cases. However, we conclude that our model provides an understanding of the phenomenon of backspatter and the physical mechanisms associated with it. The various components of the mechanism of backspatter formation are complex and overlap. The principle mechanism observed in pig cranial gunshots was the high-speed impact response of the skin overlying the skull bone. This study has also produced evidence supporting the view that backspatter can result from the splashing of superficial blood if it is already present on the skin. Subcutaneous gas effects have been demonstrated for backspatter from contact shots. There has been no clear evidence of the role of the collapse of a temporary cavity within the brain.

History

Journal

International Journal of Legal Medicine

Volume

130

Issue

4

Start page

985

End page

994

Total pages

10

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

Former Identifier

2006073626

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-10-20

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