The Medicolegal Autopsy

2021 ◽  
pp. 205-250
Author(s):  
Erica J. Armstrong
Keyword(s):  
2001 ◽  
Vol 125 (7) ◽  
pp. 924-930 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marnie J. Wood ◽  
Ashim K. Guha

Abstract The downward trend in the rate of clinical autopsies has been extensively documented in the literature. This decline is of concern when the benefits of the clinical autopsy are considered. In contrast, the rate of medicolegal autopsies has not been studied in such detail. What little reference there is to medicolegal autopsy rates suggests an absence of the same downward trend. A retrospective review of autopsy data over a 13-year period from the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Nova Scotia was conducted. This review showed a difference between the rates of clinical and medicolegal autopsies for the metro Halifax area. The clinical autopsy rate was consistently less than 30% and declined to 15% in 1999, while the medicolegal autopsy rate was consistently greater than 40% and rose to 62% in 1999. The literature proposes many reasons for the decline in the clinical autopsy rate, but none for this difference between rates. The explanation proposed here is the changing and currently uncertain purpose of the clinical autopsy versus the clear, and consistent over time, purpose of the medicolegal autopsy.


Author(s):  
Pawan Mittal

One in ten non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhages (ICH) is located in the pons with chronic arterial hypertension as the leading etiology. In the forensic context, deaths related to a pontine hemorrhage (PH) are usually encountered in situations of drug abuse, excited delirium, trauma, as well as in sudden natural deaths where some hypertensive catastrophe is the usual underlying mechanism. The clinical presentation of PH may be variable, causing a failure in timely diagnosis that, if presents with unexplainable circumstances, may become the subject of medicolegal concern. The present case relates to a middle-aged man with a long history of hypertension and presents during an afternoon with an abrupt onset of deleterious symptoms. The patient was managed conservatively but succumbed to his illness and expires during treatment. A questionable diagnosis and the case circumstances, however, directed the doctors to inform the police. A medicolegal autopsy was therefore carried out that leads to the discovery of a lethal pontine hemorrhage rupturing into the fourth ventricle and involving the adjacent cerebellar tissues as well. Severe atherosclerosis of the basal arteries constituting Circle of Willis and Vertebrobasilar system was seen along with their hallmark effects that became evident during brain sectioning. Pathological stigmata of well established hypertension were found in the heart and kidneys. A clinic pathological correlation of the physical characteristics and topography of the hematoma to its severity was also carried out, based upon the known CT and autopsy findings. The possibility of a drug related or traumatic and secondary brainstem/Duret hemorrhage was ruled out.


2002 ◽  
Vol 126 (10) ◽  
pp. 1197-1200 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Tsokos ◽  
E. E. Türk

Abstract Context.—Some autopsy studies have dealt with histologic features of esophageal varices after different therapeutic procedures. However, to the best of our knowledge, no reports have been published describing outpatient characteristics that are associated with fatal esophageal variceal hemorrhage in a medicolegal autopsy population. Objectives.—To (1) assess the incidence of sudden deaths from esophageal variceal hemorrhage in an unselected medicolegal autopsy population and (2) determine demographics of outpatients dying from esophageal variceal hemorrhage with special reference to blood alcohol concentrations at the time of death. Design.—We performed a retrospective study of all autopsy cases of sudden death from esophageal variceal hemorrhage from a total of 6038 medicolegal autopsies performed over a 5-year period (1997–2001). We analyzed individual cases to determine gender, age, location and histology of bleeding esophageal varices, pathogenic mechanism for esophageal varices, concomitant underlying diseases contributing to fatal outcome, body mass index, circumstances at the death scene, and blood alcohol levels at the time of death. We reviewed the results of toxicologic analyses of alcohol concentrations in samples of femoral venous blood and urine obtained at autopsy; concentrations had been determined by gas chromatography with mass spectroscopy and enzymatic assays. Results.—We identified 45 cases of fatal esophageal variceal hemorrhage that occurred out of hospital and presented as sudden death; the corresponding 5-year incidence in this autopsy population was 0.75%. All of the deceased were white; the male-female ratio was 1.6:1, and the mean age was 50.6 years. Ruptured esophageal varices were located in the lower third of the esophagus in 44 cases. Cirrhosis of the liver was present in all cases (alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver in 42 cases), and a hepatocellular carcinoma was present in 3 cases. Alcohol-induced pancreatic tissue alterations were frequently found. The results of toxicologic analysis were positive for alcohol in femoral venous blood and urine in 30 cases. Blood alcohol levels at the time of death were less than 100 mg/dL (21.7 mmol/L) in 15 cases, between 100 and 200 mg/dL (21.7 and 43.4 mmol/L) in 8 cases, and greater than 200 mg/dL (43.4 mmol/L) in the remaining 7 cases. Conclusions.—Apart from abnormalities in coagulation due to poor liver function in long-term alcohol users, acute alcohol intake may represent an important factor influencing mortality in individuals with esophageal variceal hemorrhage. Acute alcohol intake has transient effects on blood clotting time caused by ethanol and its main metabolites. In the present study, bloodstains at the death scene and unusual body positions of the deceased that aroused suspicion of a violent death were leading reasons for conducting a medicolegal autopsy. Apart from aspects of forensic pathology, the demographics of our study population are also noteworthy from the viewpoint of social medicine. The data we present stress the importance of fatal esophageal variceal hemorrhage as a relevant cause of sudden death occurring outside the hospital in socially isolated, alcohol-addicted individuals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (10) ◽  
pp. 397-404
Author(s):  
Russell J. Delaney ◽  
Dean Jones

2009 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. S266-S268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hitoshi Maeda ◽  
Tomomi Michiue ◽  
Bao-Li Zhu ◽  
Takaki Ishikawa ◽  
Li Quan

2020 ◽  
Vol 154 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S81-S82
Author(s):  
R F Palmer ◽  
E Palavecino ◽  
J L McLemore

Abstract Casestudy Naegleria fowleri, an amoeba, is typically found in warm freshwater lakes, ponds, rivers and hot springs. It is responsible for causing the incredibly rare and lethal central nervous system infection called Primary Amoebic Meningoencephalitis (PAM). In the United States, 145 confirmed cases have been documented since 1962. Most cases are associated with freshwater lakes, ponds and reservoirs, while only a handful have been linked to artificial recreational venues such as pools, interactive water play-grounds, and spas. In addition to highlighting a rare amoebic disease, this case illustrates the continued importance of hospital autopsies especially given recent ruling to eliminate the autopsy requirement by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Results An otherwise healthy toddler had upper respiratory symptoms and otitis media days after returning from an artificial recreational water venue, becoming increasingly lethargic and febrile over the next few days. At the hospital, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) abnormalities were suggestive but not consistent with bacterial meningitis. A meningoencephalitis panel, a Computed Tomograph (CT) scan of the head, and chest-x-ray were negative for abnormalities. Appropriate antimicrobial therapy was initiated. Three days after hospital admission, his symptoms worsened including development of dysconjugate gaze and signs of cerebellitis. He became increasingly hemodynamically unstable, suffered an arrest, and passed away days later. Conclusion Since this death did not fall under the state’s statutes mandating medicolegal autopsy, a hospital- requested autopsy was performed. Cerebral edema and a light gray to light green exudate was along the inferior and lateral left temporal lobe, brain stem, and cerebellum. An exuberant lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate with scattered polymorphonuclear leukocytes expanded the meninges. Small histiocyte-like cells with distinct eccentric nuclei and granular, vacuolated cytoplasm, confirmed by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to be Naegleria fowleri, were best visualized in the Virchow-Robin spaces and deeper parenchyma.


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