Forensic science, medicine, and pathology
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Forensic Sci Med Pathol · Jun 2013
Svechnikov's sign as an indicator of drowning in immersed bodies changed by decomposition: an autopsy study.
Bodies recovered from water often present as a difficult problem in forensic pathology. The aim of this study was to examine the presence and amount of free liquid in the sphenoid sinus in cases of freshwater drowning, and to compare this to the amount found in putrefied bodies recovered from freshwater, as well as in putrefied bodies found in an indoor environment. ⋯ Free liquid in the sphenoid sinuses (Svechnikov's sign) may be considered a vital reaction in drowning non-putrefied cases. Hemolytic staining of the aortic intima could be a significant sign of freshwater drowning. In putrefied bodies recovered from water, an amount of 0.55 ml of free liquid in the sphenoid sinuses may imply that the victim was alive upon their contact with the water, but the presence of free liquid in the sphenoid sinuses does not necessarily indicate that drowning had been the cause of death.
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Forensic Sci Med Pathol · Jun 2013
Case ReportsCircumstantial and toxicological features of deaths from self-administered intravenous anesthetic/narcotic agents.
For a better understanding of circumstantial and toxicological findings of fatalities resulting from self-administration of intravenous anesthetic/narcotic agents, medico-legal autopsy files of the State Institute of Legal and Social Medicine Berlin from 1998 to 2011 were reviewed retrospectively. Of a total of 15,300 autopsies, 9 cases of such deaths were identified, and all were health care professionals. Medical supplies for injection were found still on, or near, the body at the scene. ⋯ Benzodiazepines were detected in 4 cases. All of them were used together with propofol or opioids, and contributed to death by inhibiting respiration. It is essential to consider means of administration as well as additive or synergistic effects of combined agents when interpreting toxicological results in such cases.
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"Bloodless aortic dissection" is a rare cause of sudden death due to an aortic dissection without intimal tears and with no blood present within the dissected aortic wall. The first case was described in 1993. ⋯ The presented case involves a rapidly fatal aortic dissection in a 64 year old man without any intimal tears and no blood in the dissected aortic wall, although the dissection involved the entire aorta. Death was considered due to myocardial ischemia since the dissection had reached the aortic root and the origins of the coronary arteries.