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  • Electronic Resource  (2)
  • 1995-1999  (2)
  • Bullet destabilization  (1)
  • hypokalaemia  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International journal of legal medicine 110 (1997), S. 82-87 
    ISSN: 1437-1596
    Keywords: Key words Wound ballistics ; Body armour ; Bullet yaw ; Bullet destabilization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine , Law
    Notes: Abstract Soft body armour is designed to give protection against fragments and some low velocity bullets but is not designed to stop high velocity rifle bullets. Reports have claimed that soft body armour might disturb the stability of bullets that penetrate it, and that this might increase the size of the lesions. The reason for such an effect might be early yaw of the bullet, so we studied the behaviour of bullets which had passed through soft body armour. A 7.62 × 39 mm AK-47 rifle was fired from a permanent stand using full metal jacketed lead core bullets at a range of 30 m. Soft body armour composed of 14 and 28 layers of aramid fibres (Kevlar) was placed at 90° and 60° to the line of fire. Yaw was measured by the shadowgraph technique and a TERMA Doppler radar. A total of ten shots without body armour, and ten shots with each of the two types of body armour at the two angles were used. The results of the shadowgraph and Doppler radar measurements showed a proportional correlation between the two methods of determining the bullet yaw. The semiquantitative approach of the Doppler radar measurement was in agreement with the more concise measurement using the photographic technique. Velocity loss and loss of spin rate from penetrating 14 or 28 ply Kevlar was negligible. We observed induced instability after penetration of 14 and particularly 28 ply Kevlar, dependence of yaw with respect to the number of layers of Kevlar as well as to the angle of the body armour with respect to the line of fire.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Fish physiology and biochemistry 16 (1997), S. 1-10 
    ISSN: 1573-5168
    Keywords: nitrite ; recovery from nitrite intoxication ; potassium balance ; hyperkalaemia ; hypokalaemia ; methaemoglobinaemia ; intracellular potassium and water contents
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstracts The ability of carp to recover from nitrite-induced methaemoglobinaemia and disturbances in potassium balance and cell volume was studiedin vivo andin vitro. Nitrite accumulated to a plasma concentration of 3 mM during 2 days of nitrite exposure was eliminated from the plasma within 2–3 days in clean water. The nitrite-induced methaemoglobinaemia disappeared after 3 days of recovery. During nitrite exposure, K+ was lost from the red blood cells (RBCs) and from skeletal muscle tissue, which led to reduced cell volume and an extracellular hyperkalaemia. Extracellular [K+] rose less than predicted if lost K+ had remained in the extracellular space, suggesting further transport of K+ to the environment. The intracellular K+ and water content were restored after few days of recovery in clean water, but this was paralleled by development of an extracellular hypokalaemia. This shows that intracellular K+ balance was reestablished at the expense of the extracellular compartment, and supports that an overall K+ deficit resulted from K+ loss to the environment during nitrite exposure. Ventricle tissue differed from skeletal muscle and RBCs by not loosing K+ and by having increased sodium and water contents during nitrite exposure. These changes were corrected by recovery in nitrite-free water. In vitro addition of nitrite to blood with low O2 saturation induced metHb formation and RBC K+ efflux. Subsequent reduction of metHb to functional Hb was similar in blood with low and high O2 tension. A net re-uptake of K+ was observed only in RBCs with low O2 saturation and when metHb reached low values.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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