RTA Flashcards

1
Q

Vehicle crash energy

A

Energy=(mph^2 ×0.034)/(stopping distance)

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2
Q

Contributory factors to accidents

A
Road
- bend, leaves, visual obstruction
Enviromental
Mechanical failure
Human error
- speed
- fatigue
- inattention
Intoxication - alcohol and drugs
Natural disease - collapse at wheel
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3
Q

Pedestrian injuries

A

Height of vehicle vs centre of gravity
- child vs adult
- car vs van vs lorry
Primary injuries
- bumper strikes legs
- height above heel important - if breaking nose lowers, if accelerating nose raises
Secondary injuries
- bonnet strikes thigh, pelvis and chest
- windscreen and pillars strikes chest and head
Tertiary injuries
- victim thrown onto road surface, roadside objects or other vehicles
Running over
- patterned imprint abrasion from tyres, underneath of vehicle
- flaying lacerations
- oil/dirt staining of skin

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4
Q

Signs of speed of impact

A

Road markings
Throw distance
Impact at 30mph = 80% survival rate
Impact at 40 mph = 80% fatality rate

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5
Q

Pedestrian injury patterns

A

Wrap around
- bumper strikes leg below centre of gravity
- throw distance suggests speed of impact if vehicle braking hard
Forward projection
- struck at or above centre of gravity -> thrown forwards and down
- risk of running over
- adult struck by high fronted vehicle
- child struck by car
Wing top
- struck by front wing
- carried over wing and falls off to side
Roof top
- high speed
- secondary impact with roof of vehicle
Somersault
- very high speed
- thrown high into air - no secondary impact with vehicle
- tertiary impact with road

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6
Q

Primary impact bumper injury

A

Car bumper strikes upper tibia of adult or femur of child
Usually height is 40-50cm
- lower if car breaking
- higher if car accelerating
Height of abrasion above heel + shoe
Tibial fracture
- wedge fracture at point of impact from angulation
- spiral impact at weakest point from rotation impact

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7
Q

Types of car impact

A
Head on with another vehicle
Head on with stationary object
Rear impact
Side impact
Side-swipe
Roll over
Post crash fire
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8
Q

Features of frontal impact

A

Occupants move towards point of impact
- knees strike parcel shelf or dashboard
- bracing injuries to legs and drivers arms
- shoe soles marked by pedals
Continue upwards and forwards
- head strikes windscreen, roof or A pillar
- chest strikes steering wheel or dashboard

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9
Q

Forces to car occupants

A
Deceleration 
Whiplash
Dashboard and parcel shelf
Steering wheel and pedals
Windscreen and pillars
Seat belt injuries
Intrusion
Ejection
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10
Q

Safety measures in cars

A

Crumple zones and side impact bars
- absorb impact energy
Seatbelts
- restrain body during deceleration
- spread area of deceleration force and duration of impact due to stretching
- reduce impact with steering wheel and dashboard
- prevent ejection during rollover
- seatbelt injuries seen on neck, chest and abdomen
Airbags
- restrain upper torso during deceleration
- spread area of deceleration force and duration of impact
- reduce impact with steering wheel, dashboard and car interior
- airbag injuries - module cover, neck hyperextension, bag-slap

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11
Q

Car occupant injuries

A

Scattered abrasions, bruises and lacerations
Head and neck
- skull fracture, brain injuries, diffuse traumatic axonal injury (DTAI)
- cervical spine #
Chest
- rib and sternal #
- contusion and laceration to heart and lungs
- transection of aorta
- haemothorax rapidly fatal
Abdomen
- lacerated liver, spleen, kidney, bowel, diaphragm
- pelvic #
Legs
- pelvic or femoral #

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12
Q

Factors to help identify driver

A

Denial by disqualification or intoxicated driver
Injuries can be matched to vehicle interior
- diagonal seatbelt injuries
- dicing injuries from tempered side window glass
Transference of trace material
- blood, hair, tissue on windscreen, dash, seatbelt or airbag
- clothing fibres
Shoe impressions

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13
Q

Vehicular suicide features

A
Physical
- single vehicle impact
- stationary object
- seatbelt not worn
- no sign of avoidance
- intoxication
Psychological
- hx of depression
- previous RTA
- substance abuse
- precipitating event
- recent erratic driving - trial
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14
Q

Motor cyclist injuries

A
High speed
Unstable
Unprotected
Primary leg injuries
Secondary injuries
- head and neck
- chest - heart and lung lacerations, rib #, haemothorax
- abdomen
- limbs
Tertiary injures from road, other vehicles
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