January 2024
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1 Read
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January 2024
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1 Read
January 2024
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5 Reads
January 2024
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14 Reads
January 2024
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3 Reads
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1 Citation
September 2023
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1,581 Reads
Forensic Science Medicine and Pathology
In death investigations, the volume of gastric contents may be useful concerning the time of death estimation, or to clarify the circumstances of death. Here, the case of a 4-month-old male infant who was found dead in his mother’s bed is presented. SIDS was assumed as the cause of death after initial police investigations. Later, autopsy results revealed that this case was a homicide due to extensive abusive head trauma. The infant had three skull fractures on the back of his head with subdural hemorrhage and cerebral oedema. The survival time after feeding him formula and corresponding the time of death was determined to evaluate the mother’s initial claims that the infant was alive several hours after feeding. In this case, the volume of stomach contents of the last meal was known. From the volume of milky fluid found in the stomach at autopsy, it was possible to estimate the time of death within a narrow time frame of less than one hour after feeding. The mother’s claims could be ruled out, and she later confessed to having killed the child soon after feeding him. Even methods with low precision for estimating time of death, like examining stomach contents, can be essential for solving practical cases. To our knowledge, this is one of the first published cases in which an infant’s stomach content was used successfully in the reconstruction of a homicide.
July 2023
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314 Reads
Forensic Science Medicine and Pathology
Sudden death due to unknown cardiac disease in children is an unusual occurrence. An apparently healthy 12-year-old boy without any physical restrictions collapsed suddenly and died despite cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The main autopsy finding was extensive scarring of the myocardium, especially the interventricular septum. This extensive scarring was exceptional for the young age. Histologically, replacement-type fibrosis with patchy lymphomonocytic infiltrate and infiltration by macrophages were observed. The case was diagnosed as chronic myocarditis, which may have progressed to dilated cardiomyopathy with inflammation or inflammatory cardiomyopathy.
January 2023
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2 Reads
Romanian Journal of Legal Medicine
Purpose. Heat shock proteins (Hsp) predominantly act as molecular chaperones and were first described in 1962. They have cytoprotective functions that support cell survival under (sub)lethal conditions. Hsp 70 is an established marker of cellular heat-induced stress and is present in the upper respiratory tract tissue in cases of fire death. However, data on Hsp expression in mechanical and thermal skin injures is unavailable. Therefore, we investigated the expression of Hsp 27, 60, and 70 in mechanical and thermal skin injuries and compared protein expression between uninjured and injured skin using immunohistochemistry. Methods. Specimens were obtained from 30-35 cases whose age ranged between 19 and 95 years, while control (uninjured) samples were obtained from the abdominal region of the same individual. The etiology of skin injuries included blunt force, sharp force, strangulation marks, thermal injury, gunshot wounds, and frost erythema. Results. Hsp27 showed slightly increased expression (51.7% vs. 45.4%, SD 25.6% and 31.1%, p-value 0.396) in injured skin compared to uninjured skin, while Hsp70 showed marginally higher expression in uninjured skin (7.8% vs. 5.6%, SD 22.3% and 14.8%, p-value 0.82). Hsp60 displayed negligible expression in both injured and uninjured skin (2.1% vs. 1.4%, SD 8.2% and 5.9%, p-value 0.45). Conclusion. As there were no significant differences in Hsp expression between injured and uninjured skin, Hsp may not be suitable local vitality markers in mechanical and thermal skin injuries. Keywords: heat shock protein 27, heat shock protein 60, heat shock protein 70, immunohistochemistry, wound vitality, forensics.
September 2022
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71 Reads
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1 Citation
International Journal of Legal Medicine
This case report demonstrates the impact of different sampling sites on the quantification of narcotic substances. In 2020, officers secured a syringe containing a light-yellow paste-like substance, for which a drug pre-test indicated a positive result for amphetamine, inducing subsequent analyses of the sample by means of a gaschromatographic-mass spectrometric method (GC–MS) and liquid chromatography–(tandem) mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS). Depending on the sample location, different results were obtained, with amphetamine not being detected in each sample. Amphetamine was particularly found at the outlet of the syringe, while amphetamine detection on the inside of the syringe at the plunger seal was only possible occasionally and, moreover, in lower concentrations. Based on this and with regard to the comparatively small amphetamine concentrations, contamination of the syringe (especially on the tip of the syringe) was assumed. Hence, the results strengthened the importance of the implication of different sampling sites, when either homogenization of the sample is not feasible or is not performed for reasons of plausibility checks concerning possible contamination of the sample.
June 2022
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358 Reads
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9 Citations
Forensic Science Medicine and Pathology
Frank’s sign (named after American pulmonologist Sanders T. Frank) refers to a diagonal skin fold between the tragus and outer edge of the earlobe. Gradation is based on the bilateral presence and/or degree of the earlobe fold. The presence of this sign, referred to as the diagonal earlobe crease (DELC), has been associated with coronary artery disease (CAD), independent of other cardiovascular risk factors. Corresponding studies are predominantly based on clinical or angiographic assessments, and few autopsy studies exist. The association of DELC with CAD, cardiovascular risk factors, and causes of death was investigated via retrospective and prospective evaluations. It was also investigated whether the degree of DELC correlated with the macroscopic severity of coronary heart disease. Furthermore, the influence of age on the appearance of DELC was analyzed and compared using two age groups. Additionally, binomial logistic regression analysis was performed to investigate the influence of age on the presence of higher-grade DELC and CAD. In cases related to a lethal cardiac event, the majority (78%) showed high-grade DELC. The DELC grade correlated significantly with CAD severity ( r s = 0.474, p < 0.001) and with the severity of general atherosclerosis ( r s = 0.606, p < 0.001) with medium and large effects sizes, respectively. Age was predominantly more suitable than DELC concerning the sensitivity, specificity, and positive prognostic value for preexisting cardiac disease and cardiac-related causes of death. In both DELC and CAD, age has a significant influence on the presence of higher-grade manifestation, but the influence of age in CAD appears to be even more significant than in DELC. The main results of previous autopsy studies and the prognostic value could have been confirmed, but these findings appear to be limited to younger patients.
April 2022
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22 Reads
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2 Citations
Forensic Science International
The expression levels of intracellular heat shock proteins (Hsps), specialized chaperone proteins, increase in cases of cellular stress with protein misfolding and aggregation. In a previous study, we demonstrated that there is an extensive increase in intracellular Hsp27 and 70 expression levels in renal tissues in fire fatality cases. Hsp expression can be induced by not only heat, but also by tissue hypoxia. In cases of fatal hemorrhage, the individual suffers hypoxemia and consequently tissue hypoxia. Here, we examined 43 cases of fatal hemorrhage and a control group of 85 deaths not related to blood loss or temperature exposure. We evaluated Hsp27 and 70 protein expression levels in renal tissue using immunohistochemistry. The results revealed that no extensive Hsp27 or 70 expression is induced in the fatal hemorrhage cases. The renal Hsp levels were similar to those of the control group. Fatal blood loss does not cause relevant cell stress.
... However, no reports have comprehensively used these staining methods to retrospectively examine BV in hypothermia cases. Furthermore, although serum BHB concentrations have been reported to be associated with the frequency of BV appearance [13,14], pathological studies on hypothermia are still lacking. ...
December 2020
Romanian Journal of Legal Medicine
... It also has a limited ability to protect enzymes against heat denaturation. HSP27 prevents apoptosis by inhibiting caspase activation, regulating the signaling pathway, or acting as a chaperone to protect cells [7]. HSP60, adhesion molecule E-selection, ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 expression from vascular endothelial cells; It also induces IL-6 release from vascular endothelial cells, muscle cells and macrophages. ...
April 2022
Forensic Science International
... As Gjerde et al. note: ' …the time lapse between field testing and collection of blood sample may cause a significant elimination of drugs from blood, particularly for THC and cocaine ( … ), causing drug concentrations in the collected blood sample that are much lower than at the time of police apprehension' (Gjerde et al., 2018, p. 249). Some drugs substances, like cannabis and cocaine, have a short half-life (the time it takes for the active substance in your body to reduce by half) of about a half hour to an hour (Houwing and Hagenzieker, 2013;Liut et al., 2022). The present study was, however, too limited in its data collection to offer a more precise explanation as to which factor was most dominant in accounting for the high proportion of FP. ...
March 2022
Drug Testing and Analysis
... Our results align with previous research demonstrating a strong correlation between Frank's sign and CAD. 9,15,16 Studies in populations from China and Mexico have shown that Frank's sign is independently associated with CAD, even after adjusting for traditional risk factors such as age, hypertension, and diabetes. 17 For instance, a Chinese study reported that the prevalence of Frank's sign was 46.2% in those without CAD and 75.2% in those with CAD. 10 Similarly, our study confirms a robust relationship between Frank's sign and the severity of CAD diagnosed via CCTA. ...
June 2022
Forensic Science Medicine and Pathology