3. Post mortem examinations Flashcards

1
Q

2 types of autopsies/post mortems

A
  1. hospital (consent) post mortems: require consent of relatives, to confirm clinical diagnosis, nowadays not very common
  2. medico-legal post mortems: because death is unknown or of certain category, on the instruction of police for ex., relative consent is not needed
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2
Q

Types of death when autopsies are done (8)

A
  1. uncertified death (doctor does not know the cause)
  2. trauma
  3. suicide
  4. alcohol/drug abuse
  5. medical care
  6. death in custody
  7. death at work
  8. other (other violent, suspicious or unexplained causes)
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3
Q

In some countries, particularly Middle East and Muslim, post mortem examination can be (4)

A
  1. External only
  2. External + blood sampling
  3. External + partial internal
  4. External + CT

Ideal is still external+internal (full)

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4
Q

Standard procedure (3)

A
  1. available background information (prior to death, medical history)
  2. external examination (clothing, personal items, general appearance, PM changes, external injuries)
  3. internal examination
    (trauma, natural disease, samples for further examination)
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5
Q

General appearance characteristics

A
  • height, weight, build
  • hair, beard, eyes, teeth
  • tattoo, piercing, jewellery
  • old scars, fractures, injuries
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6
Q

Post mortem changes observation 2 reasons

A
  1. to recognise what is normal and not confuse it as injury
  2. to determine how long the person has been dead
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7
Q

Questions regarding external injuries (3)

A
  1. what kind of injury and thus what is the cause?
  2. is it fresh or old?
  3. is there an overall pattern or recognisable feature?
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8
Q

Other external signs might include (2)

A
  1. asphyxial signs
  2. natural disease signs
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9
Q

Standard post mortem dissection procedure (5)

A
  1. midline incision from neck to pubis
  2. skin is reflected back
  3. front of ribcage is removed
  4. organs are removed and dissected
  5. for head incision is made across the top part of the scalp from ear to ear, skull is then opened horizontally with a saw and the brain exposed
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10
Q

Further investigations (4)

A
  1. tissues for microscopic examination - histology
  2. blood, urine and other samples for alcohol and drugs - toxicology
  3. swabs or tissues for detecting infections - bacteriology
  4. tissue samples and blood to detect genetic abnormalities - genetics
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11
Q

Main samples used for toxicology are (5)

A
  • blood
  • urine
  • bile
  • vitreous
  • stomach
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12
Q

Post mortem imaging (3)

A
  1. identification (X-ray and CT)
  2. trauma (X-ray and CT)
  3. natural disease (CT only)
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13
Q

Legal aspects of death (3)

A
  1. confirming
  2. certifying
  3. reporting

post mortem examination
1. external
2. internal
3. investigations

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