The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology
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The Hamburg University Institute of Legal Medicine presents 2 cases of injuries of crossbow arrows where the patients survived. Crossbows are used nowadays as sports and hunting weapons. They are freely obtainable, and since people without practice can shoot them, there are constant injuries and fatal cases. ⋯ Due to the elasticity of the tissue, the arrow shaft in the wound track may have the effect of an incomplete tamponade so that major hemorrhaging is prevented. In this condition, the injured person may be conscious and capacitated. From the medical viewpoint, crossbow arrows should therefore be invariably left in the wound, secured against displacement during transport, and only removed in the hospital.
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Am J Forensic Med Pathol · Mar 2006
Pediatric drowning: a 20-year review of autopsied cases: II. Pathologic features.
The pathologic findings in autopsies of drowning victims are nonspecific and vary from case to case. However, most reported pathologic series of drowning cases exclude children and do not take into consideration the unique circumstances surrounding bathtub drownings. In addition, the effect of resuscitation on the autopsy findings has not been studied in children. ⋯ There was no relationship between these findings and the age and sex of the decedent. Other clinical conditions or occult pathologic findings that may have contributed to death were found in 8 cases (13%). The findings highlight the need for thorough clinicopathologic correlation in cases of drowning to accurately interpret the pathologic findings.
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Am J Forensic Med Pathol · Mar 2006
Case ReportsSudden unexpected death in a child with varicella caused by necrotizing fasciitis and streptococcal toxic shock syndrome.
A 4-year-old child with chickenpox infection for 5 days prior to death complained of swelling and pain in his right leg that required medical assistance in the emergency department. Radiologic study was normal, and analgesic and bandage of the leg were prescribed. Some hours later, he presented cyanosis, dizziness, and vomiting and collapsed. ⋯ Bacterial emboli were present in most of the tissues. Microbiologic cultures of blood and cerebrospinal fluid showed group A beta-hemolytic streptococcus (Streptococcus pyogenes). Death was attributed to fulminant streptococcal toxic shock syndrome, with necrotizing fasciitis as a complication of varicella.
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Am J Forensic Med Pathol · Dec 2005
Case ReportsMedicolegal aspects of an unusual uterine perforation with multiload-Cu 375R.
Perforation of the uterus is one of the most serious complications associated with insertion of intrauterine contraceptive devices (IUD). According to recent studies, this lesion occurs in 0.87 per 1000 cases, but statistics generally fluctuate between 0.05 and 13 per 1000 insertions. "Primary" perforations occur at the time of IUD insertion, and "secondary," or delayed, perforations are usually assumed to be caused by reactive uterine contractions. We report an unusual case of uterine perforation, which occurred 9 days after the insertion of a Multiload-Cu 375 IUD. The criteria for differential diagnosis between primary and secondary complications are discussed, particularly from the perspective of medical malpractice cases.
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Asphyxia secondary to airway obstruction has numerous underlying causes, both acute and chronic. Causes of chronic airway obstruction, such as neoplasms and tracheal scarring, are often clinically apparent well prior to asphyxia. Causes of acute airway obstruction may not be as obvious to clinicians or investigators. ⋯ Microscopically, the thrombus was composed of fibrin, platelets, and red blood cells. The cause of death was asphyxia secondary to airway obstruction by thrombus. We present these 2 unusual cases of asphyxia and review of the literature focusing on asphyxia and the etiology of airway thrombi.