Cases reported "Postmortem Changes"

Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/10. temporal bone pathology findings due to drowning.

    It has been reported that anoxia due to near-drowning or near-suffocation causes brain damage but not inner ear damage. On the other hand, it has been shown that brain death causes both brain damage and inner ear damage. However, studies of temporal bone pathology resulting from sudden death due to drowning are few. We studied temporal bone pathology in six cases of individuals who died of accidents due to drowning. In all temporal bones examined, we found extensive congestion petechiae and haemorrhage in the vessels in the mucosal layers of the middle ear and mastoid air cells, as well as in the vessels around the facial nerve and carotid canal. In the inner ear, there was no abnormality in Corti's organ or the vestibular organs, except in one case who died in the bath. Our findings suggest that petechiae haemorrhage or congestion in the vessels of the mucosal layer and the vessels themselves of the middle ear occurs upon acute death due to drowning.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/10. Redistribution of diltiazem in the early postmortem period.

    We determined tissue distribution of diltiazem after it was used to treat hypertension in two cases. The postmortem interval was 16 h in both cases. diltiazem was isolated using liquid-liquid extraction, and it was identified and quantitated using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and GC, respectively. In one case, diltiazem concentrations in the lungs and pulmonary vessel blood were 62-82 and 27-30 times higher than right femoral blood, respectively. Although blood was not obtained from the left cardiac chambers, aortic blood showed a 10-times higher level of diltiazem than right femoral venous blood. diltiazem concentration in blood in the right cardiac chambers was 3.6 times higher than that in right femoral venous blood. In another case, diltiazem concentrations in the lungs were 7.4-7.6 times higher than right femoral venous blood. Blood in the pulmonary arteries, pulmonary veins, left cardiac chambers, and aorta showed 2.0-3.1 times higher levels of diltiazem than right femoral venous blood. Blood in the right cardiac chambers displayed only 1.3 times higher level of diltiazem than right femoral venous blood. Our results strongly suggest that diltiazem accumulated in the lungs and was rapidly redistributed into pulmonary venous blood and then into the left cardiac chambers.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.25
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/10. Post-mortem drug redistribution--a toxicological nightmare.

    Detailed human case data is presented to illustrate the dramatic extent of the phenomenon of post-mortem drug redistribution. The data suggests that there is a post-mortem diffusion of drugs along a concentration gradient, from sites of high concentration in solid organs, into the blood with resultant artefactual elevation of drug levels in blood. Highest drug levels were found in central vessels such as pulmonary artery and vein, and lowest levels were found in peripheral vessels such as subclavian and femoral veins. In individual cases, in multiple blood samples obtained from ligated vessels, concentrations of doxepin and desmethyldoxepin ranged from 3.6 to 12.5 mg/l and 1.2 to 7.5 mg/l, respectively; amobartital, secobarbital and pentobarbital from 4.3 to 25.8 mg/l, 3.9 to 25.3 mg/l and 5.1 to 31.5 mg/l respectively; clomipramine and desmethylclomipramine from 4.0 to 21.5 mg/l and 1.7 to 8.1 mg/l, respectively and flurazepam 0.15 to 0.99 mg/l; imipramine and desipramine from 4.1 to 18.1 mg/l and 1.0 to 3.6 mg/l, respectively. We conclude that this poorly studied phenomenon creates major difficulties in interpretation and undermines the reference value of data bases where the site of origin of post-mortem blood samples is unknown.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.75
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/10. Menkes disease--an autopsy case with metal analysis of hair.

    We report the first case of Menkes' disease in korea, occurring in a 1 1/2 year old boy with characteristic clinical, arteriographic and pathologic features. Postmortem examination revealed widespread neuronal destruction and abnormally tortuous and elongated large arteries including cerebral, visceral and limb vessels. Microscopically, many of the hairs formed were twisted (pili torti), of varying caliber (monilethrix), and fractured (trichorrhexis nodosa). In the radioactivated analysis of scalp hair, copper elements was not found. The abnormal vessels were characterized by fragmentation and disruption of the internal elastic lamina with intimal proliferation. The neuronal destruction was widespread in the cerebral gray matter and in the cerebellum, and there was associated gliosis. The changes in the cerebellum were particularly severe, with neuronal loss in the internal granular cell layer. Many purkinje cells were lost, and the remainder showed unusual dendritic sprouts from the cell body and grotesque proliferation of dendritic tree. In other organs, mild chronic peribronchitis, and scattered foci of immature glomeruli in renal cortex were noted.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.5
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/10. postmortem changes in blood amitriptyline concentration.

    Detailed toxicological studies were undertaken on two suicides by amitriptyline overdose, one with salicylate also. In the first case, 10 initial blood samples taken 21 h after body discovery and an estimated 28 1/2 h after overdose had drug concentration (mg/L) ranges of 2.5-12 for amitriptyline (AM), 0.7-3.1 for nortriptyline (NOR), and 81-244 for salicylate (SAL). Ten blood samples taken 42 h later showed corresponding ranges of 1-39 AM, 0.6-7.0 NOR, and 86-310 SAL. Sample haemoglobin concentrations (range, 8.7-23.5 g/dl) did not correlate with drug concentrations. Postmortem increase in pulmonary vein AM concentration occurred more rapidly than in the pulmonary artery, likely reflecting relative ease of diffusion across the vessel walls from lung (AM, 60 mg/kg). In nine tissue samples, drug concentrations (mg/kg) were highest in the liver: AM, 301; and SAL, 670. Considerable drug residue was present in gastric contents, duodenal contents, and seven sequential small bowel contents. In both cases, sanguineous putrefactive pleural fluid showed higher AM concentrations on the left than on the right (2.0 vs 1.4 and 23 vs 16), likely reflecting diffusion from gastric drug residue. The detailed case data illustrate the intensity and complexity of postmortem drug diffusion from reservoirs in solid organs, such as the lungs, and unabsorbed gastric residue, into the blood and putrefactive fluids.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.25
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/10. Pulmonary micromorphology in fatal strangulations.

    Pulmonary histopathology was studied in a group of 106 fatal strangulations including cases of hanging (n = 55; typical, n = 20; atypical, n = 35), ligature strangulation (n = 12), throttling (n = 15), combinations of throttling and ligature strangulation (n = 7) and other compressing force against neck (n = 17). The control group (n = 10) consisted of cases of sudden cardiovascular death. The following results were obtained: intra-alveolar edema of different degree and strong hyperemia could be regularly observed in nearly all cases, especially in fatal hanging (apart from the control cases, in this group the highest mean lung weights were observed). Further frequent histological patterns were perivascular and intra-alveolar hemorrhages, local dystelectasis and focal emphysema. Alterations of the lung vessel contents could be detected in a varying extent: fat embolism (n = 7), mainly of minor degree, embolism of bone marrow tissue (n = 5) and intravascular cell accumulations (n = 22). embolism of fat and bone marrow tissue was nearly always restricted to cases with accompanying blunt force or resuscitation measures. Whereas only 4 out of 55 cases of hanging revealed intravascular cell accumulations (including different types of leukocytes and immature bone marrow cells), 18 out of 51 cases with the other forms of strangulation exhibited this phenomenon. These accumulations mainly occurred in a discrete and widely scattered manner, appeared in 3 out of 10 control cases (resuscitation measures) as well, and were limited to cases with either protracted courses or accompanying blunt violence. The following conclusions are drawn: the regularly observed general changes of lung microstructure (e.g. edema, hyperemia) are undoubtedly non-specific for strangulation; the alterations of blood vessel contents may serve as a general vitality marker, if resuscitation measures are excluded, but not as an evidence of strangulating force. In cases without signs of blunt force they point to protracted agony courses (shock equivalents).
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 4.9517284655761
keywords = blood vessel, vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/10. Site dependence of methamphetamine concentrations in blood samples collected from cadavers of people who had been methamphetamine abusers.

    Various blood samples were collected from heart cavities and blood vessels in eight autopsy cases of people who had been methamphetamine abusers. methamphetamine and its metabolite, amphetamine, were determined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry-selected ion monitoring. In four cases where left and right heart blood samples were collected, methamphetamine concentrations in the left heart blood samples were 1.9-2.6 times higher than those in the right heart blood samples. In three cases where pulmonary vein blood samples were collected, methamphetamine concentrations in the pulmonary vein blood samples were higher than those in other blood samples sites. To interpret the blood methamphetamine concentrations, site dependence should be taken into consideration.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 4.7017284655761
keywords = blood vessel, vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/10. postmortem changes in blood tranylcypromine concentration: competing redistribution and degradation effects.

    Site and temporal changes in tranylcypromine (TCP) and lithium concentrations in blood were studied in a human poisoning case. Blood samples from peripheral vessels and six central vessels were obtained at 0, 6, 24, 48 and 72 h after starting the autopsy. Nine tissue samples were obtained on completion. TCP showed preferential concentration in liver (2.21 micrograms/g) and brainstem (2.46 micrograms/g). There was a moderate post mortem redistribution phenomenon with TCP concentrations lowest in peripheral blood (0.17 micrograms/ml) at 0 h and highest in central vessels at 24 h (0.52 micrograms/ml). At 72 h blood TCP concentrations fell below those at 0 time but the samples showed marked putrefactive changes. Control blood samples spiked with TCP and incubated for 48 h at 37 degrees C showed a 58% fall in drug concentration. By contrast with TCP, lithium, which has a small Vd (0.8 l/kg) and is chemically stable, did not show this pattern of change in blood concentration. The site and temporal differences in TCP concentration in blood can be explained by the competing effects of post mortem redistribution and drug degradation. Redistribution is an early post mortem phenomenon characterised by diffusion, along a concentration gradient, from drug reservoirs in solid organs into adjacent blood vessels. Drug degradation is a later phenomenon associated with putrefactive change.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 5.4517284655761
keywords = blood vessel, vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

9/10. Suspected maternal infanticide in a case of hydranencephaly.

    A medico-legal autopsy case of hydranencephaly in a male infant which was first suspected of maternal infanticide is reported. The infant was 48 cm in height, weighed 2.86 kg and the circumference of the head, the chest and the abdomen was 32.2 cm, 31.0 cm and 30.4 cm, respectively, with no deformities of the head or body. autopsy examination, however, revealed a severe defect in the central nervous system. The cranial cavity was filled with a cloudy dark red fluid (ca. 310 ml) instead of the cerebral hemispheres. The residual central nervous tissues were mostly subtentorial structures from the midbrain to the spinal cord namely, corpus mamillare, corpora quadrigemina, corpus pineale, crus cerebri, pons, cerebellum, medulla oblongata and spinal cord. The basal ganglia, thalamus, hypothalamus and chiasma opticum could not be found, although atrophic hypophysis, eyeballs and optic nerves were present. The usual distribution of cerebral blood vessels, especially the branches of the anterior and middle cerebral arteries and Willis' ring, was absent despite the presence of the internal and external carotid arteries. Other organs were, in general, congestive. The marked cortical atrophy of the adrenal glands (left 0.5 g, right 0.6 g), especially the zona fasciculata, was characteristic. The hydrostatic lung test gave partially positive results, but this was considered to be due to artificial respiration by an ambulance man because amniotic fluid components were microscopically noted and fully expanded alveoli were not found. In conclusion, the cause of the infant's death was diagnosed as stillbirth due to aspiration of amniotic fluid caused by the severe defect of vegetative hypothalamic function through hydranencephaly.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 4.7017284655761
keywords = blood vessel, vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)

10/10. Redistribution of basic drugs into cardiac blood from surrounding tissues during early-stages postmortem.

    The objective of this study was to elucidate the mechanism(s) responsible for increases in the concentrations of basic drugs in cardiac blood of bodies in a supine position during early-stages postmortem. The concentrations of basic drugs in cardiac blood and other fluids and tissues of three individuals who had used one or more basic drugs were examined. The results were compared with those obtained in experiments using rabbits. In the first case, autopsy of whom was performed approximately 12 h after death, methamphetamine was detected and its concentrations were in the order: lung >> pulmonary venous blood > blood in the left cardiac chambers (left cardiac blood) >> pulmonary arterial blood > blood in the right cardiac chambers (right cardiac blood). In the second case, autopsy of whom was performed approximately 9 h after death, methamphetamine and morphine were detected and their concentrations in the left cardiac blood were roughly twice those in the right cardiac blood. The methamphetamine and morphine concentrations in the lung were 2 to 4 times higher than those in cardiac blood samples. In the third case, autopsy of whom was performed approximately 2.5 days after death, the pulmonary veins and arteries were filled with chicken fat clots. Toxicological examination revealed the presence of four basic drugs: methamphetamine, amitriptyline, nortriptyline and promethazine. Their concentrations in the lung were 5 to 300 times higher than those in cardiac blood, but postmortem increases in the concentrations of these drugs in the cardiac blood were not observed. In the animal experiments, rabbits were given 5 mg/kg methamphetamine intravenously or 20 mg/kg amitriptyline subcutaneously and sacrificed 20 min or 1 h later, respectively. The carcasses were left in a supine position at the ambient temperature for 6 h after or without ligation of the large vessels around the heart. For the groups with ligated vessels, the mean ratios of the drug concentrations in both left and right cardiac blood samples 6 to 0 h postmortem were about 1, whereas in those without ligated vessels, these ratios were about 2 and 1, respectively. The order of the methamphetamine and amitriptyline concentrations in blood and tissue samples were roughly: lungs > myocardium and pulmonary venous blood > cardiac blood, inferior vena caval blood and liver. Our results demonstrate that when bodies are in a supine position, (1) basic drugs in the lungs diffuse rapidly postmortem into the left cardiac chambers via the pulmonary venous blood rather than simply diffusing across concentration gradients, and (2) basic drugs in the myocardium contribute little to the increases in their concentrations in cardiac blood during the early postmortem period.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.75
keywords = vessel
(Clic here for more details about this article)
| Next ->


Leave a message about 'Postmortem Changes'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.