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Ronald Jones, Leon Kundrotas, “HOOAH!” A Case of Pneumomediastinum in the Military Training Environment; Hamman’s Sign 71 Years Later, Military Medicine, Volume 176, Issue 3, March 2011, Pages 352–355, https://doi.org/10.7205/MILMED-D-10-00273
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ABSTRACT
A previously healthy 20-year-old male trainee developed chest pain, shortness of breath, and neck pain after repeatedly shouting “Hooah!” during a motivational squad competition. He was found to have developed a pneumomediastinum with soft tissue crepitus of the neck. He had an uneventful recovery. Unique to the military training environment, vigorous shouting, including “Hooah!” as a motivational stimulus, can have barotraumatic consequences. The term “spontaneous” as applied to a pneumomediastinum diagnosis is examined and the auscultatory finding of “Hamman’s sign” is reviewed.