Forensic Aspects of Trauma Flashcards

1
Q

Classification of Injury

A
  • Appearance or method of causation: Abrasion, contusion, laceration, incised wounds, gunshot wounds, burns
  • Manner of causation: Suicidal, accidental, homicidal
  • Nature of injury: Blunt force, sharp force, explosive
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2
Q

Blunt force injury cause

A

-Caused by impact with blunt object- ground, fist, foot, weapon

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3
Q

Types of blunt force trauma

A
  • Contusions (bruises)
    - Burst blood vessels in skin
  • Abrasions (graze, scratch)
    - Scraping of skin surface
  • Lacerations (cut, tear)
    - Tear/split of skin due to crushing
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4
Q

How is a laceration identified?

A
  • tissue bridges
  • bruising
  • abrasion
  • irregular edges
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6
Q

Factors affecting prominence of bruises

A
  • Skin pigmentation
  • Depth and location - occur more readily over loose skin - eyebrow, scrotum
  • Fat - ↑ subcut fat leads to bruising more easily
  • Age
    - Children - skin loose and delicate
    - Elderly - blood vessels of skin poorly supported
  • Resilient areas- buttocks, abdomen - bruise less easily with given impact than areas with underlying bone which acts as an anvil with skin between bone and inflicting object
  • Coagulative disorders – thrombocytopenia
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7
Q

Sharp force injuries

A
  • Injury caused by any weapon with sharp cutting edge

- superficial (incised) wounds or penetrating (stab) wounds

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8
Q

Sharp force injury types

A
  • Incised wounds
    - Superficial sharp force injury caused by slashing motion
    - Longer on the skin surface than it is deep
  • Stab wounds
    - Penetrating injury resulting from thrusting motion
    - Wound depth greater than length on the surface
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9
Q

Defensive type injuries

A
  • Blunt and sharp force
  • Passive - victim raises arms and legs for protection
    - Sliced shelved incised wounds often with skin flaps over backs of hands and forearms
  • Active – victim tries to grab weapon or attackers hand
    - Sliced shelved incised wounds on palmer aspect of hands and web spaces between fingers
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10
Q

Self inflicted injuries

A
  • Commonly sharp force
  • Site of election - usually wrists/forearms, chest and abdomen
  • Parallel, multiple and tentative incisions
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11
Q

Head injuries - volume of blood

A
  • 35ml - Symptomatic
  • 40-50ml - Clinical deterioration, life threatening
  • 80-100ml - Commonly fatal due to ↑ ICP and herniation
  • +150ml - Fatal
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12
Q

Traumatic Subarachnoid Haemorrhage

A
  • Due to rapid rotational movement of head, usually as the result of a single punch to jaw/ upper part of neck or side of head
  • Causes traumatic rupture of vessels at base of brain - most frequently distal portion of intracranial vertebral arteries at point where they cross the dura
  • Possibly represents same twisting damage to brainstem
  • Immediately unconscious and in cardiac arrest
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13
Q

Diffuse axonal injury

A

-clinical term – immediate and prolonged coma with no apparent mass lesion or metabolic abnormality

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14
Q

Traumatic axonal injury

A

-Pathological term- damaged axons due to trauma

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15
Q

Post-mortem injuries

A

-lack of vital reaction, parchmentation

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