• Am J Forensic Med Pathol · Mar 2003

    New horizons in forensic radiology: the 60-second digital autopsy-full-body examination of a gunshot victim by multislice computed tomography.

    • Michael J Thali, Wolf Schweitzer, Kathrin Yen, Peter Vock, Christoph Ozdoba, Elke Spielvogel, and Richard Dirnhofer.
    • Institute of Forensic Medicine, Insel Hospital, University of Berne, Berne, Switzerland. thali@irm.unibe.ch
    • Am J Forensic Med Pathol. 2003 Mar 1; 24 (1): 22-7.

    AbstractThe goal of this study was the full-body documentation of a gunshot wound victim with multislice helical computed tomography for subsequent comparison with the findings of the standard forensic autopsy. Complete volume data of the head, neck, and trunk were acquired by use of two acquisitions of less than 1 minute of total scanning time. Subsequent two-dimensional multiplanar reformations and three-dimensional shaded surface display reconstructions helped document the gunshot-created skull fractures and brain injuries, including the wound track, and the intracerebral bone fragments. Computed tomography also demonstrated intracardiac air embolism and pulmonary aspiration of blood resulting from bullet wound-related trauma. The "digital autopsy," even when postprocessing time was added, was more rapid than the classic forensic autopsy and, based on the nondestructive approach, offered certain advantages in comparison with the forensic autopsy.

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