Saturday 3 September 2011

Emedinews: Insights on Medicolegal issues - In MLC cases, the direction of the shelving of margins of a lacerated wound indicates the direction of the blow applied to cause the wound.

• Lacerations are tears or splits of skin, mucous membranes, muscle or internal organs produced by application of blunt force to a broad area of the body that has crushed or stretched tissues beyond the limits of their elasticity.
• Crush injury from a direct blow may produce an irregular or stellate laceration with a variable degree of devitalized tissue, abrasion and visible contamination.
• Do not close a laceration if there is visible contamination, debris, non-viable tissue or signs of infection. Wounds may involve vascular areas of the face and scalp where the risk of infection is low or extremities where infection becomes a greater risk, along with the possibility of tendon and nerve damage. The elderly and patients on chronic steroid therapy may present with "wet tissue paper" skin tears following relatively minor trauma.
• When produced by a blunt weapon, such as club, crowbar, stone, brick etc., a lacerated wound is usually accompanied by a considerable amount of bruising of the surrounding and underlying tissues, and has inverted and irregular edges. The direction of the shelving of margins of a lacerated wound indicates the direction of the blow applied to cause the wound.
• When a heavy weight like a wheel of a heavy cart or a truck passes over an extremity, by its shearing and grinding force, it tears the skin from the underlying tissue and crushes the muscles and soft part lying beneath it realizing considerable blood and fat in them.
• Crush injury syndrome or fat emboli may follow a lacerated wound. The tear, avulsion, split are types of laceration.

(Contributed by Dr Sudhir Gupta)

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