Gunshot wounds remain one of the most complex types of combat injuries. A gunshot wound is a dynamic system in which the initial mechanical destruction of tissue is only the starting point of a complex and multi-level process. Subsequently, the wound site steadily transforms and the volume of non-viable tissue increases, spreading beyond the wound channel area. This review examines the pathogenesis of a gunshot wound, which is a chain of cause-and-effect changes in which each link is formed as a direct consequence of previous disturbances. The pathophysiological events that contribute to the chronic wound process are identified, which cannot be interrupted by natural mechanisms.
Makarov et al. (Thu,) studied this question.