BACKGROUND: Cardiac injury in trauma patients can be secondary to either blunt or penetrating trauma and is a significant cause of death. The commonest etiological factors for blunt cardiac injury… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiac injury in trauma patients can be secondary to either blunt or penetrating trauma and is a significant cause of death. The commonest etiological factors for blunt cardiac injury include motor vehicle collisions, falls, and crush or blast injuries. The incidence of blunt cardiac injury following falls is reported to be between 5 and 50%.CASE REPORT: A combat pilot lost his life in an aircraft accident. Although he had ejected successfully just before the aircraft caught fire and his parachute had deployed fully, it was engulfed in the ball of fire rising up from the burning aircraft wreckage, causing the parachute to burn up. As a result, the pilot had a free fall from an estimated height of 70-80 ft (21-24 m). Autopsy revealed a ruptured right atrium and endocardial tears at the right atrioventricular junction. The left side of the heart and the coronary arteries were unscathed. The histopathological finding showed evidence that the cardiac injuries sustained were antemortem. The cause of death was ascertained to be due to cardiac rupture, leading to hemorrhagic shock.DISCUSSION: Cardiac rupture in this case appears to be a case of the 'water hammer' effect, the right atrium being the commonest site of blunt cardiac rupture. It is possible that the individual landed on his feet after his parachute got burnt in the ball of fire and the violent compression of the lower limb and abdominal veins, caused by the sudden hyperflexion of the lower limbs over the abdomen, caused the cardiac rupture in this case.CONCLUSION: The possibility of blunt cardiac trauma should always be kept in mind while dealing with survivors of ejection at low levels.Sharma MD, Gupta N, Rajkumar T, Sharma A. Cardiac rupture due to a fall from height: the 'water hammer' effect. Aerosp Med Hum Perform. 2022; 93(10):755-757.
               
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