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Introduction
Road traffic trauma is a preventable cause of morbidity and mortality across the globe. A wide array of automotive
safety measures have been implemented over several decades. They provide with active safety and passive safety.
Seatbelts and supplementary restraint systems (SRS airbags) have undoubtedly been recognized as two important
passive safety measures for vehicle occupants though they themselves may occasionally cause significant injuries in
severe crashes. Injuries caused by inbuilt safety devices upon the occupants often come in atypical forms whose
interpretation would be dubious unless carefully appreciated by forensic medical practitioner. This fact is elaborated
with the following two case examples.
Case reports
The first case is regarding superficial burns on the face as a result of the deployment of airbags. The exact type,
mechanism and the cause of the injuries were not recognized during the initial management. The second case is a
diaphragmatic rupture which is extremely rare in healthy individuals with properly fastened seatbelts.
Conclusions
Injuries of both cases were properly interpreted at the clinical forensic examination. As correctly expected from a
clinician he or she very justly pays more attention on the acute management, critical care and therapeutic aspects of
such injuries rather than attempting to identify the exact type, mechanism of causation and other medico-legally
significant issues. Yet, in the big picture outside the boundaries of providing critical care, including the implementation
of preventive measures, precise identification and interpretation of such injuries become the vital obligation of the
forensic medical expert.