The World War II Multimedia Database

For the 72 Million

Japanese Soldier Hibakusha From Hiroshima Developing Keloid Scars

Image Information
A Japanese soldier reveals his second and third degree burns for American investigators. Photographed 79 days after the atomic attack on Hiroshima, this man was caught in the open 2,970 feet (900 meters) from the epicenter. These burns are developing into keloidial scars. Keloid tumors (derived from the Greek chele – “crab‘s claw“) expand beyond the original wound. On December 23, 1946, Doctor Masao Tsuzuki (1893-April 5, 1961), formerly Admiral Tsuzuki of the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Japanese doctor in charge of studying the atomic bomb‘s effects starting a few days after the attack, claimed that keloids were the greatest problem for hibakusha (explosion-affected people). Caused by the thermal effects of the bomb and not radiation, keloids affected 60% of hibakusha. Many survivors were shunned by a Japanese public socially unaccustomed to disfigurements. Plastic surgery for keloids was attempted, but often the keloids returned. The lack of medical care after the attack prevented most hibakusha from receiving even the rudimentary burn treatment available in Japan at the time.
Image Filename wwii1384.jpg
Image Size 2.04 MB
Image Dimensions 2286 x 2796
Photographer Unknown
Photographer Title United States Army Signal Corps
Caption Author Jason McDonald
Date Photographed October 24, 1945
Location
City Hiroshima
State or Province Hiroshima
Country Japan
Archive National Archives and Records Administration
Record Number NRE-338-FTL(EF)-8600(2)
Status Caption ©2009, ©2024 MFA Productions LLC
Image in the Public Domain

Next Post

Previous Post

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© 2024 The World War II Multimedia Database

Theme by Anders Norén