scholarly journals 27 Suicidal Asphyxiation by Helium Intoxication and Plastic Bag Suffocation Forensic Pathology No. FP 08-7 (FP-338)

2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-292
Author(s):  
Lisa B.E. Shields ◽  
Jack Arnold ◽  
Donna Stewart
2018 ◽  
Vol 133 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-180
Author(s):  
Keishu Murakami ◽  
Takashi Kawaguchi ◽  
Yumiko Hashizume ◽  
Kengo Kitamura ◽  
Misato Okada ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 137-142
Author(s):  
Arnaldo Stanislao Migliorini ◽  
Michele Boracchi ◽  
Guendalina Gentile ◽  
Francesca Maciocco ◽  
Andrea Piccinini ◽  
...  

A rare case of homicide with plastic bag suffocation is presented in which forensic genetic investigations were carried out on the inner surface of a plastic bag placed over the head of an elderly woman, bedridden after a stroke. The results obtained suggested that she had been murdered and hinted at the perpetrator of the crime. In fact, it emerged that biological traces left by the victim matched those of her principal caregiver, her psychotic daughter, who later confessed to the crime. The old woman also had a son affected by a serious illness, whose genetic profile was found on the same bag. In a later interview, he stated that his sister had tried to kill him too, thus confirming the genetic findings and allowing the investigators to hypothesise that the daughter had used the same means to try to kill him. Based on these results, the usefulness of forensic genetic testing when investigating complex plastic bag suffocation deaths is highlighted. This peculiar case deserves interest, since no murder of this kind has ever been reported in the Italian forensic literature.


1972 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 184-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Polson ◽  
D. J. Gee

2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
M Madanraj ◽  
Mahabalesh Shetty ◽  
Sheryl Suares ◽  
Suraj Shetty

2021 ◽  
pp. 002581722098671
Author(s):  
Guendalina Gentile ◽  
Stefano Tambuzzi ◽  
Michele Boracchi ◽  
Paolo Bailo ◽  
Domenico Di Candia ◽  
...  

We analysed the recorded cases of suicides committed other than by hanging in prison in Milan. A retrospective analysis was conducted on 25,512 autopsies performed from 1993 to 2019, selecting all the suicides in prison but our attention was focused solely on cases where an alternative mode to hanging was used. From a total of 97 suicide events in prison, 15 were consistent with the established search criteria: 6 victims died from plastic bag suffocation, 4 by direct inhalation of butane gas, 2 associated plastic bag suffocation to inhalation of butane gas, one committed suicide with an edged weapon, one by self-burning and, finally, one by voluntary ingestion of a food to which he was allergic, with the intent of inducing an anaphylactic shock. Our analysis has shown that the landscape of prison suicides is diverse, not limited solely to hanging. Therefore, it is necessary for the forensic scientific community to raise awareness of potentially unusual suicide methods in prisons and, in the same way, for the Penitentiary Administration to put adequate preventive measures and strategies in place.


2002 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. e18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sotiris Athanaselis ◽  
Maria Stefanidou ◽  
Nikos Karakoukis ◽  
Antonis Koutselinis

1993 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
A L Perez Martinez ◽  
P Chui ◽  
J. M Cameron

Suffocation by plastic bag is not common. The finding of a body at the scene of death with a plastic bag in situ could be diagnostically valuable to the pathologist. Otherwise the pathologist may be hard put to arrive at a firm opinion as to how the deceased met his/her death; in fact, in three of the cases reported in this paper, the local pathologist could not give a cause of death when the initial autopsy was performed. Plastic bags could be accidentally placed over the head; put there to help in the inhalation of volatile substances; with homicidal intention; or simply as an effective suicidal method. The object of this paper is to study the cases where bodies were found with a plastic bag over the head, and in particular the cases where the cause of death was due to plastic bag suffocation.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002581722110103
Author(s):  
Saverio Potenza ◽  
Alessandro Mauro Tavone ◽  
Claudia Dossena ◽  
Gian Luca Marella

The use of helium in plastic bag suffocation is a suicide method recently found in forensic cases. Although it is not common practice, there has been a strong increase in its use during the past 20 years, thanks to the accessibility of information on the web and materials needed to implement it. From a pathophysiological point of view, there are various theories on how helium can change the timing and, also, the cause of death when the head is inside a plastic bag. We report two cases where we believe that the action of helium, whose unequivocal use is demonstrated by the circumstantial data, has unfolded in a different way. In the first case, the discovery of an intense cyanosis of the face, blood leakage from the respiratory orifices and the destruction of numerous alveolar septa with histologically demonstrated blood extravasation, was left for a longer agonic period and a no negligible rate of pulmonary barotrauma in determination of death. In the second case, the total absence of external pathological phenomena, internal and histological, allows us to hypothesise an onset of death that is faster and catalysed by helium and explained by the known sympathetic hyperactivation and consequent cardiac arrhythmic death described in similar plastic bag suffocation cases.


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