Death - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Death

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DEATH & POST-MORTEM CHANGES ... Time estimation Cause of Death Can detect abnormal pathology inside deep organs ADIPOCERE is a grayish-white postmortem matter ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Death


1
Death Post-Mortem changes
  • Mohammed Bader
  • 5th year medical school
  • University of Jordan

2
Death
  • Death is divided into two stages
  • Clinical death
  • its the Cessation of the function of 3
    systems
  • CVS, RS, CNS.
  • Cellular death
  • cells no longer functioning or have metabolic
    activities or aerobic respiration.
  • Its follow the clinical death stage.
  • Its depend on the blood perfusion to the tissue.
  • Different tissue die at different rate cerebral
    cortex tolerate only few minutes of anoxia while
    connective tissue and muscles may survive longer
    (for hours).

3
Somatic Death (Brain death)
  • the person is irreversibly unconscious, not aware
    of surrounding environment and he is unable to
    appreciate sensory stimuli or initiate any
    voluntary movement
  • Reflex nervous activity may persist and
    circulatory and respiratory function continue
    either spontaneously or with artificial support.
  • Somatic death brain death vegetative state
  • (all tissue and cells of the body are alive and
    functioning except for those damaged in the CNS)

4
Indications of Death
  • Indications of death
  • Unconsciousness
  • Loss of all reflexes
  • No reaction to painful stimuli
  • Muscular flaccidity
  • Cessation of heart beat and respiratory movement
  • Eye signs
  • loss of corneal and light reflexes
  • Mid dilated position of the pupils
  • Irregular size and shape of the pupils
  • Eyelids usually closed incompletely
  • Tache noire where the sclera remains exposed,
    two triangles of discoloration appear at each
    side of the cornea, either brown or black.

5
Tache Noire
6
Apparent Death
  • a state that mimics death, occurs in
  • Electrocution
  • Hypothermia
  • Sun stroke
  • Drowning
  • Drug over dose (barbiturates)
  • Head injury

7
Rigor Mortis
  • One of the recognizable signs of death that is
    caused by a chemical change in the muscles after
    death, causing the limbs of the corpse to become
    stiff and difficult to move or manipulate.
  • Death ?cessation of respiration ?depletion of
    oxygen used in the making of ATP? ATP no longer
    provided to operate the SERCA pumps in the
    membrane of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, which
    pump calcium ions into the terminal cisternae?
    Calcium ions diffuse from the terminal cisternae
    and extracellular fluid to the sarcomere ? Ca
    binds with troponin ? crossbridging between
    myosin and actin proteins.
  • Unlike normal muscle contractions, the body is
    unable to complete the cycle and release the
    coupling between the myosin and actin, creating a
    perpetual state of muscular contraction, until
    the breakdown of muscle tissue by digestive
    enzymes during decomposition.
  • Causes of rigors mortis are ATP depletion
    (glycogen store depletion), actin-myosin
    interaction and lactic acid accumulation.

8
Rigor Mortis (contd)
  • Sequence
  • Primary muscular flaccidity
  • Generalized muscular stiffness
  • Secondary muscular flaccidity
  • RM starts to develop about 2-3 hrs after death
  • Usually its first detected in smaller muscle
    groups such as those around the eyes, mouth, jaw
    fingers.
  • It resolves in the same order in which it
    develops.
  • It concludes around 36-48 hrs after death

9
Factors affecting timing of RM
  •  
  • Environmental temperature
  • Cold and wet ? onset slow, duration longer
  • Hot and dry ? onset fast, duration shorter
  • Muscular activity before death
  • muscles healthy and robust, at rest before death
    ? slow onset, duration longer
  • muscles exhausted/ fatigued ? onset rapid, esp in
    those limbs being used (eg in someone running at
    time of death, lower limbs develop RM faster than
    upper limbs)
  • increase activity (convulsions, electrocution,
    lightning) ? rapid onset short duration
  • Age
  • extremes of age ? rapid onset
  • Health
  • Cause of death
  • asphyxia, pneumonia, nervous des with muscle
    paralysis dehydration ? slow onset
  • septicemia poisoning ? rapid onset, may even be
    absent, esp in limbs affected by septicimia
  • emaciated or died of wasting disease ? rapid
    onset, short duration
  •  

10
RM time estimation
Warm Flaccid Death lt 3 hrs
Warm Stiff 3-8 hrs
Cold Stiff 8-36 hrs
Cold Flaccid Death gt 36 hrs
11
Rigor Mortis (contd)
  • RM in Iris
  • Antemortem constriction or dilation modified
  • May affect the eyes unequal, making the pupils
    unequal
  • RM in the Heart
  • Contracted, stiff LV may be mistaken for LV
    hypertrophy
  • RM in Dartos muscle of scrotum
  • Rigor in Dartos? constricts testes and epididymis
    expulsion of semen
  • Contraction of seminal vesicles and prostate
  • Postmortem expulsion of semen
  • RM in Erector Pilli muscles attached to hair
    follicles
  • Goose bumps, hair stands up

12
Cadaveric Spasm
  • Cadaveric spasm
  • also known as instantaneous rigor, cataleptic
    rigidity, or instantaneous rigidity
  • rare form of muscular stiffening that occurs at
    the moment of death, persists into the period of
    rigor mortis and can be mistaken for rigor mortis
  • the cause is unknown, but usually associated with
    violent deaths happening with intense emotion
  • may affect all muscles in the body, but typically
    only groups, such as the forearms, or hands
  • seen in cases of drowning victims when grass,
    weeds, roots or other materials are clutched, and
    provides proof of life at the time of entry into
    the water.
  • often demonstrates the last activity one did
    prior to death and is therefore significant in
    forensic investigations, e.g. clinging on a knife
    tightly

13
Rigor Mortis vs. Cadaveric Spasm
Rigor mortis Cadaveric spasm
Onset delayed after death (2-3 hrs) Duration approx 12-24 hrs Onset is instantaneous Duration is a few hours, until it is replaced by rigor mortis
Intensity comparatively moderate Intensity comparatively very strong
All muscles of the body are affected gradually. Selected muscles, which were in a state of contraction at the time of death, are affected.
14
Cadaveric spasm in a drowning victim had grass
from the river bank firmly clutched in the hand
15
Conditions Mistaken as RM
  • Heat stiffness
  • Exposure of a body to intense heat (burning, high
    voltage electrocution, etc) ?coagulation of
    muscular proteins ? muscular shortening, with
    flexion in the upper limb, giving the apperance
    of pugilistic attitude.
  • Cold stiffness
  • Exposure of the body to extreme cold (lt-5C)
    ?solidification of subcutaneous fat and muscles,
    freezing of synovial fluid in joints
  • Rigor mortis is only postponded, and after
    warming the body, the rigor mortis will
    supervene.

16
Medicolegal Importance of RM
  • Time estimation
  • Cause of death
  • Know position
  • Sure sign of death

17
Hypostasis/Livor Mortis
  • after death occurs, circulation of blood ceases
    subsequent movement of blood is by gravity
  • blood accumulates in the capillaries in the
    dependent parts of the body ? purple or reddish
    purple discoloration of the adjacent skin
  • in pressure areas such as the shoulder blades,
    buttock ?discoloration will be pale.
  • starts immediately after death.
  • apparent after 0.5-1 hr and fixed after 8 hrs.
  • may not appear at all especially in infants, old
    ppl and anemic ppl.

18
Hypostasis (contd)
  • early hrs after death it appears in the form of
    blotchy post-mortem hypostasis which usually
    sinks down and becomes confluent on the most
    dependant area
  • once hypostasis is established, there is
    controversy about its ability to undergo
    subsequent gravitational shift if the body is
    moved into a different posture

19
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20
Sites of Hypostasis
  • Depends on the position of the body before death
  • Supine
  • shoulders, buttocks
  • heels pressing against surface give white color
    (pale).
  • Vertical (hanging)
  • distally in legs feet.
  • Drowning
  • chest, upper chest, and upper limbs.
  • Face-down death
  • as in epilepsy, drunken victims
  • whitening around nose lips.

21
Distribution of Hypostasis
If the body remains vertical after death as in
hanging cases, hypostasis will be most marked in
the feet and to a lesser extent the hands.
22
Color of Hypostasis
  • The color of hypostasis is variable and depends
    on the state of oxygenation at death.
  • Usual color is blue-pink
  • Its a crude indicator of the mode of death
  • Cherry-pink CO poisoning
  • Dark blue-pink cyanide poisoning
  • Brown methahemoglobinemia
  • Bronze septic abortion caused by Clostridium
    perfringes.
  • Pallor anemia, hemorrhage (or normal in extremes
    of age)

23
Medico-legal Importance of Hypostasis
  • Sure sign of death
  • Cause of death
  • Time estimation
  • Position before/ after death
  • Indicate if the body was moved or not after death

24
Body Cooling/ Algor Mortis
  • the most useful indicator of time of death during
    the first 24 hours post-mortem.
  • after death all metabolic activity ceases rapidly
    (muscles, liver) circulation stops ? heat
    production ceases soon after death
  • The body surface begins cooling immediately after
    death, followed by delay in deep organs cooling,
    until a heat gradient is set up between the core
    of the body and the surface.
  • Delay ? temperature plateau
  • Plateau variable from minutes to 2-3 hours.
  • In practice the temperature is either measured
    per rectum or intra-hepatic via an abdominal
    stab.
  • The rate of body cooling
  • 1C/hr in summer
  • 1.5C/hr in winter.
  •  

25
Factors affecting Rate of Cooling
  • Surface area of the body
  • larger surface area ? speeds up cooling rate.
  • Children increase surface area gives rapid heat
    loss.
  • Body weight
  • Larger bw slower cooling
  • Smaller bw faster cooling
  • Edema
  • slower cooling rate.
  • Clothing, posture and.
  • Environmental Temperature
  • Higher humidity rapid cooling rate
  • Rapid air velocity rapid cooling rate
  • Water
  • rapid cooling rate
  • More rapid in flowing water than still water
  • If there is a fulminating infection, e.g.
    septicaemia, the body temperature may continue to
    rise for some hours after death.

26
Post-Mortem Decomposition
  • Turning the tissue of the body into fluids and
    gases by the effect of bacteria and enzymes
  • starts immediately after death at the cellular
    level
  • becomes visible in 48-72 hrs.
  • Two phenomena for putrefaction
  • Autolysis occurs by digestive enzymes released
    from the cells after death.
  • Bacterial action most of them come from the
    bowel and Clostridium welchii predominates (same
    bacteria that causes gas gangrene)

27
  • The speed of decomposition depend on
  • amount of bacteria in the body.
  • Temperature Rapid putrefactive changes may been
    seen in corpses left in a room which is well
    heated.
  • Humidity A high environmental humidity will
    enhance putrefaction.
  • Injuries to the body surface promote putrefaction
    by providing portals of entry for bacteria and
    the associated blood provides an excellent medium
    for bacterial growth.

28
Mummification
  • Occurs as a result of exposure of the body to
    high temperatures and dry air currents, to a
    degree that decomposition will stop.
  • The body will be Dry, Shriveled up and brown in
    color.
  • The Optimum Conditions for Mummification ? dry
    warm climate.
  • Once the changes are complete, the body will
    remain in that condition indefinitely.
  • No growth of micro organisms.
  • The time required for complete mummification
    cant be precisely stated but it takes several
    weeks to months, depending on the size of the
    body and atmospheric conditions.

29
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30
Medico-legal Importance of Mummification
  • Identification
  • Time estimation
  • Cause of Death
  • Can detect abnormal pathology inside deep organs

31
Adipocere
  • is a grayish-white postmortem matter caused by
    fat decomposition, which results from hydrolysis
    and hydrogenation of the lipids (fatty cells)
    that compose subcutaneous fat tissues.
  • The optimum conditions for the formation of
    adipocere
  • Moisture
  • Warm environment

32
Medicolegal Importance of Adipocrere
  • Preserve the body which can permit identification
    after death.
  • It may give conclusions about the cause of death.
  • It indicates that the time interval since death
    was at least weeks to several months.

33
  • The End.
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