codilly wrote:Will a shot from a 45 to the heart kill you anymore then a 22 to the heart?
codilly wrote:Will a shot from a 45 to the heart kill you anymore then a 22 to the heart?
codilly wrote:Will a shot from a 45 to the heart kill you anymore then a 22 to the heart?
Beginning in the mid-1990s, medical studies reported an ominous trend toward the use of larger caliber firearms. But a 2004 study published in the journal American Surgeon found that despite that trend, in-hospital death rates from gunshot wounds had not changed.
The study attributed this seeming paradox to improvements in treatment, including resuscitation and surgical techniques.
But to survive a serious gunshot wound, a victim must first make it to the hospital.
Researchers at the University of Louisville concluded that large-caliber gunshot wounds meant more victims were dying in the field and being transported to the morgue rather than the trauma center.
From 2003 through 2005, doctors at the University of Louisville Hospital saw no patients with gunshots to the heart even though, in years past, as many as one such case a month was admitted, said David Richardson, a professor of surgery at the university.
During that same period, the coroner's office reported 15 to 20 fatalities a year involving gunshot wounds to the heart, meaning that all the victims died before getting to the hospital.
Big-caliber, high-velocity guns "just blow the thing apart," Richardson said.
Some doctors use the term "morselized" in referring to the damage to the heart caused by large-caliber bullets.
"If you get shot with a .22 in the heart, you've got a chance to survive," said Richardson, director of emergency surgical services at the hospital. "If you get shot with a Glock 9mm, you're not going to make it."
Richardson said his data most likely represents what is happening in cities around the country, including Milwaukee.
Police here say that in the early 1990s, inexpensive handguns, such as the .25-caliber Raven, were the most common weapons used in shootings.
Since then, the caliber has increased with more use of 9mm, .40-caliber and .45-caliber guns with high-capacity magazines, as well as assault-style rifles, Deputy Police Chief Brian O'Keefe said.
Why not, since I hear they are telling PTC instructors that .22LR is just as deadly as a .45
Holland&Holland wrote:If you reall want to defend yourself get a Ma Duece otherwise you are just joking around.
plink wrote:Holland&Holland wrote:If you reall want to defend yourself get a Ma Duece otherwise you are just joking around.
I've been trying to find a decent IWB holster for it. It chafes a bit much right now.
Pat Cannon wrote:It's because one round of .45 ACP will drop the biggest toughest attacker every single time, whereas 8 hits with 9mm will only enrage them and they'll kill you while you're trying to stuff a fresh magazine into that skinny little mag well.
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