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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Role of virtopsy in the post-mortem diagnosis of drowning.
Livio MiloneMaria Cristina GalfanoMassimo MidiriDario PiconePaolo ProcacciantiGiuseppe Lo ReGiuseppe La TonaArgo AFederica VernuccioSergio SalernoRoberto LagallaStefania Zerbosubject
medicine.medical_specialtyAutopsyAUTOPSY VIRTOPSYSensitivity and SpecificityUser-Computer InterfaceVirtopsyPredictive Value of TestsCause of DeathmedicineCadaverHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imaginghealth care economics and organizationsNoseNeuroradiologyRetrospective StudiesPostmortem DiagnosisRib cageDrowningbusiness.industryReproducibility of Resultssocial sciencesGeneral Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureParanasal sinusesClavicleRadiographic Image Interpretation Computer-AssistedRadiologyAutopsybusinessTomography X-Ray Computeddescription
Purpose: Due to admitted limits of autopsy-based studies in the diagnosis of drowning, virtopsy is considered the new imaging horizon in these post-mortem studies. The aim of our study was to evaluate the role of virtopsy performed through computed tomography (CT) in the forensic diagnosis of drowning. Materials and methods: We retrospectively examined the CT data of four cadavers recovered from sea water and suspected to have died by drowning. Each patient underwent a full-body post-mortem CT scan, and then a traditional autopsy. Conclusion: To date, there are no autopsy findings pathognomonic of drowning. This study proves that virtopsy is a useful tool in the diagnosis of drowning in that it allows us to understand if the victim was alive or dead when he entered the water and if the cause of death was drowning. Results: All the cadavers showed fluid in the airways and patchy ground-glass opacities in the lung. Only one patient had no fluid in the digestive tract; this patient had a left parietal bone fracture with a large gap and other multiple bone fractures (nose, clavicle, first rib and patella). One of the three patients who had fluid in the digestive tract had no fluid in the paranasal sinuses. This latter patient showed cerebral oedema with subarachnoid and intraventricular haemorrhage, multiple bone fractures (orbital floor, ribs, sacrum and acetabular edge) and air in the heart, in the aorta and in bowel loops. © 2014, Italian Society of Medical Radiology.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-07-11 | La Radiologia medica |