A 21-year-old University of WA graduate from Mt Hawthorn has survived being shot in the face during a New Orleans shooting on Sunday.

Amy Matthews was celebrating the end of her studies with her best friend from Stirling when she was caught in the middle of a firefight that injured 10 bystanders.

After completing a bachelor of arts in March with majors in political science and economics, Ms Matthews and a friend had flown to the US for a gap-year holiday.

They had made their way down the east coast from New York City to Nashville, Tennessee, where they hired a car and drove to New Orleans.

Warning: Graphic Content Footage of the shooting







It was their third night in the historic French Quarter of the city and by 2.45am, it had stretched into their fourth morning.

They were walking to the next neon-lit bar on Bourbon Street, barely halfway through their US road trip, when the crack of gunshots sent people running for their lives.

At some point in the chaos a partial or whole bullet entered Ms Matthews' mouth through her right cheek and exited through her top lip, causing extensive injuries to her gums, teeth and palate.

At the time, she assumed a flailing hand had struck her in the face but when she stopped running, she realised her mouth was full of blood and loose teeth.

Speaking from her hospital bed at Interim LSU Hospital, Ms Matthews told _The West Australian _ that she felt lucky to be alive.

"I have about 10 teeth left," she said. "It shattered the top of my palate in four places and ripped my tongue in several places.

"Because the bullet was so hot, it just ripped through my teeth and burnt a lot of my gums. They had to remove a lot of dead gum.

"I think I'm very lucky because I wasn't the only person who got shot that night.

"There were two people who were critical and they think one of them is going to die.

"I can replace my teeth and my mouth will heal but if it had have been a few centimetres towards my brain or my jugular, who knows?"

The young male suspects in the shooting fled the scene, leaving two people fighting for their lives on a panic-stricken street.

Sitting together on the pavement, their dream holiday now a nightmare, the desperate Perth women found help from an unexpected source.

Two US marines kept Ms Matthews relatively calm for the 20 minutes until paramedics drove her to hospital. "One of the marines took his shirt off and used it for my mouth," Ms Matthews said.

"I was trying not to freak out too much and the marines were trained in that so they were keeping my mind off those thoughts.

"They were making jokes and telling me how I was handling it better than most of their marine friends would have. They definitely helped."

Over several hours in the emergency department, Ms Matthews had about 30 stitches put in her tongue and a metal support fixed to the roof of her mouth.

She has since had a visit from New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu and her mother Amanda has flown in from Perth to be by her side.

Ms Matthews lives with her parents in Mt Hawthorn and she hopes to fly home this weekend.

"I have to be on a liquid diet for six weeks until I get implants in my teeth," she said.

"Until the bone and the gum heal, they can't do anything aesthetically about my mouth, so I'll have no teeth for about six to eight weeks." Sunday's shooting was the third major shooting in Bourbon Street in the past three years.

Ironically, Ms Matthews wrote a thesis paper at UWA examining gun use in the US. She said her traumatic experience would not stop her returning to the country.

"Because of last year and all the little kids who were shot, I thought something would definitely be done but it just shows you how embedded the whole gun culture is in the US," she said.

"This won't deter me from coming back but it makes me angry that the Government can't be strong enough to say, 'No, something needs to be done'."