Gunshot injuries : how they are inflicted : their complications and treatment . Fig. 67.—Fracture from Colts new service revolver, unjacketed bullet, .38 cal. at 5 yards. Army Medical School collection. CHARACTERISTIC LESIONS CAUSED BY PROJECTILES 91. Fig. -Fracture by soft nose bullet, Colts automatic pistol Cal. .38 at 5 yardsment of lead nucleus, fragmented. Army Medical School collection. Note lodge- 92 GUNSHOT WOUNDS Explosive effects in gunshot wounds at proximal ranges by the high-power rifles were referred to in the beginning of this Chapter, They were noted by all experimenters


Gunshot injuries : how they are inflicted : their complications and treatment . Fig. 67.—Fracture from Colts new service revolver, unjacketed bullet, .38 cal. at 5 yards. Army Medical School collection. CHARACTERISTIC LESIONS CAUSED BY PROJECTILES 91. Fig. -Fracture by soft nose bullet, Colts automatic pistol Cal. .38 at 5 yardsment of lead nucleus, fragmented. Army Medical School collection. Note lodge- 92 GUNSHOT WOUNDS Explosive effects in gunshot wounds at proximal ranges by the high-power rifles were referred to in the beginning of this Chapter, They were noted by all experimenters upon cadavers andanimals, and there is record of their appearance in war, especiallyin the Manchurian campaign. Generally speaking, these highly de-structive effects are commonly seen when using the older rifles like Springfield and the Martini-Henry of the English Armyup to 350 yards, and with the rifles of reduced caliber the character-istic effects have been noted still farther. The term Explosive Effects is in a measure confusing because itconveys the impression that the wound is the result of an explosion,or explosive bullet. The term is entirely descriptive and it owes itsorigin to the similarity in the appearance of a wou


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