Legal medicine
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In forensic pathology, previous studies have suggested the possible application of cardiac troponins in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction. However, there appears to be insufficient practical data on other causes of death. The present study was a comprehensive analysis of the cardiac, peripheral blood and pericardial levels of cardiac troponin T (cTnT) in serial medicolegal autopsy cases (n = 405) with a survival time <24 h and within 48 h postmortem to assess the validity of investigating myocardial damage with special regard to traumatic causes of death. ⋯ The elevation of cTnT was associated with the pathology of advanced myocardial damage involving swelling and liquefactive necrosis. The above-mentioned differences were the smallest for peripheral blood. These findings suggest that elevations in postmortem serum and pericardial cTnT levels depend on the severity of myocardial damage at the time of death and are related to the pathological findings, although postmortem interference should be taken into consideration.
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Although previous forensic pathological studies have suggested the possible application of cardiac troponins in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction, there appears to be insufficient data with regard to its cardiac pathology. The present study analyzed the heart blood, peripheral blood and pericardial fluid levels of cardiac troponin T (cTnT) in sudden cardiac deaths (n = 96) within 48h postmortem in relation to pathological findings of acute myocardial infarction (AMI, n = 34), recurrent myocardial infarction (RMI, n = 23), ischemic heart disease without any pathological evidence of infarction (IHD, n = 24) and other heart diseases (OHD, n = 15). Control groups (n = 75, survival time <24 h) within 48 h postmortem consisted of asphyxiation (n = 35), drowning (n = 27) and cerebrovascular diseases (n = 13). ⋯ These differences were the smallest for peripheral blood. For sudden cardiac death cases, the difference in cTnT level at each site among the causes of death was independent of gender, age, heart or lung weight and pathologies of affected coronary artery and severity of coronary stenosis. These observations suggest that the elevation in postmortem blood and pericardial cTnT levels in sudden cardiac death may depend on the severity of ischemic myocardial damage including the size and intensity of myocardial lesions involving multiple interstitial hemorrhages and necrosis, and also the postmortem period for heart and pericardial levels.
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The aim of this retrospective study was to differentiate complications from malpractices in surgical cases and to help specialists who work as court experts in malpractice litigations. We reviewed 366 malpractice cases notified to The Higher Health Council by Criminal Courts between 1995 and 2000. Of these, 93 had General surgical malpractice cases. ⋯ The rate of autopsy in deaths from malpractices was 79.6%. Fifty percent of malpractice litigations were groundless. It can be suggested that incessant exposure to criticisms and complaints may make innocent surgeons less willing to take risks for patients.
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In this retrospective autopsy study, a detailed analysis of methanol related deaths in Trakya region of Turkey is presented and departmental autopsy records, toxicology and histopathology results are analyzed. We found that methanol poisonings comprise 2.83% of all forensic autopsies (n:18), 88.8% of the cases were male, most of the victims were aged between 41 and 45. Blood methanol concentrations range widely from 55 to 479 mg per 100ml. ⋯ Most of the cases died in hospital and were poisoned through the consumption of alcoholic beverages from illicit sources and colognes. It is important for physicians to be aware of methanol poisoning symptoms and for forensic pathologists to obtain samples for toxicology during autopsies. Some preventative strategies including to routine control of the stores, to prevent the production of illegal alcoholic beverages, etc. should be developed.
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In postmortem biochemistry, there is insufficient data available for the practical analysis of factors in the pericardial fluid. The aim of the present study was to examine postmortem pericardial fluid for urea nitrogen (UN), creatinine (Cr) and uric acid (UA) levels to investigate the pathophysiology of death in forensic autopsy cases (total, n = 409; within 48 h postmortem), which included blunt, sharp instrument injury, asphyxiation, drowning, fire fatalities, hyperthermia, hypothermia, methamphetamine-related fatalities, other poisoning, delayed death from trauma and natural diseases. ⋯ Although the pericardial levels were otherwise similar to the clinical serum reference ranges, only the drowning fatalities showed significantly lower levels for each marker. These observations suggested the stability of UN, Cr and UA in the pericardial fluid within 48 h postmortem and their usefulness for the pathophysiological investigation of death involving azotemia.