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January 1920

A REVIEW OF THE EFFECTS OF GUNSHOT WOUNDS OF THE HEAD: BASED ON THE OBSERVATION OF TWO HUNDRED CASES AT U. S. GENERAL HOSPITAL NO. 11, CAPE MAY, N. J.

Author Affiliations

PHILADELPHIA

Arch NeurPsych. 1920;3(1):17-40. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1920.02180130020002
Abstract

NEUROLOGIC ASPECTS  This report presents some general observations made in a series of 200 cases of wounds of the head, in practically all of which symptoms of injury to the brain was present. While the main purpose is to present a general survey of the cases as a group, certain aspects of the subject deserve more than casual mention.

Material.—  These two hundred patients represent practically all of the cases of this type under observation at U. S. A. General Hospital No. 11, at Cape May, N. J., from October, 1918, to June, 1919. Of these patients, 88 per cent. suffered from wounds associated with demonstrable defects or fractures of the cranial bones, and 12 per cent. presented brain symptoms without demonstrable cranial injuries.Patients with cranial defects..................... 163Patients with cranial fractures................... 13No cranial injury evident........................ 24It will be seen that most of these patients presented cranial

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