Forensic Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Rigor mortis

A

Usually occurs approx 24-48 hrs uniformly.

After rigor mortis, a period of secondary flaccidity occurs.

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2
Q

Algor mortis

A

Change in body temperature to reach room temperature.

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3
Q

Livor mortis

A

Pooling of blood post mortem. Can be either fixed or unfixed.

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4
Q

Putrefactive decomposition

A

Occurs when exposed to air and moisture. Bacteria decompose the body. Bacteria at the cecum are usually first to invade.

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5
Q

Adipocere decomposition

A

Occurs in bodies submerged in water. Hydrolysis of lipids allows for a wax-like covering of the body.

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6
Q

Mummification

A

Occurs in deserts where there is no moisture of microbes, beetles, etc.

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7
Q

Who can legally certify a death certificate for natural death?

A

MEs, coroners, justice of the peace, etc.

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8
Q

MEs are required to sign death certificate for which manners of death? (4)

A

Accident
Suicide
Homicide
Undetermined

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9
Q

Cause of death vs. manner of death

A

COD is what killed the person, while manner of death is the MEs opinion (homicide, suicide, etc.)

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10
Q

2 major roles of the ME

A

Assign a COD
Render an opinion as to manner of death

ME has no duty to families, they work for society at large.

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11
Q

Mechanical forces causing injury (6)

A
Abrasions
Lacerations
Contusions
Incise wounds
Gunshot wounds
Blast injury
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12
Q

Thermal injuries (3)

A

Burns
Hyperthermia (heat cramps, heat exhaustion, heat stroke)
Hypothermia

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13
Q

What are the 5 major categories of injury caused by physical environment?

A
Mechanical force
Thermal injuries
Ionizing radiation
Electrical injuries
Atmospheric pressure
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14
Q

What 2 systems are mostly affected by radiation?

A

Hematopoietic and lymphoid systems

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15
Q

What is the first problem that occurs when radiation is given more than 0.15 sv?

A

Temporary sterility

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16
Q

Main sites of injury and main signs and symptoms for:

0-1 sv

1-2 sv

2-10 sv

10-20 sv

> 50 sv

A

0-1 sv: none, none.

1-2 sv: lymphocytes, moderate granulocytopenia and lymphopenia.

2-10 sv: bone marrow, leukopenia, hemorrhage, hair loss, vomiting.

10-20 sv: small bowel, diarhea, vomiting, fever.

> 50 sv: brain, ataxia, coma, convulsions.

17
Q

Accurate death certification schema:

A

Immediate COD (mechanism) (pneumonia)

Due to:

(Proximate) COD (COPD)

Manner of death (natural)

18
Q

3 types of wounds from blunt force trauma

A

Abrasion
Contusion
Laceration

19
Q

Wounding formula

A

W = E x 1/T x 1/A x K

K is modifying factors (elasticity, etc)
E is energy transferred = 1/2 MV^2
T is period of energy transfer (time)
A is area of application of force

20
Q

Contusion

A

A bruise that results from hemorrhage into soft tissues due to rupture of subcutaneous BVs by blunt injury.

21
Q

What is the epidermis like in a contusion?

A

It is intact and therefore a contusion does not bleed externally, but may be seen from skin or internal organs.

22
Q

What do yellow, blue/purple/red and brown bruises suggest in dating a contusion?

A

Yellow is most significant and its presence indicated the bruise is 18 hrs or older.

None of the others are helpful.

23
Q

Abrasion

3 types of abrasions

A

A wound where the epidermis is injured. It bleeds externally, but not profusely.

Brush (sliding/gliding)
Impact
Patterned (when abrasion reflects the surface of appearance of the instrument)

24
Q

Stab wound

A

Sharp force creates a wound track that is greater thab the length (deeper than wide).

25
Q

3 major categories of guns and their subtypes

A

Long guns

  • bolt/lever action
  • semiautomatic
  • fully automatic

Smooth bores

Hand guns

  • revolvers
  • semiautomatics
26
Q

What is the wounding formula for guns/projectiles?

A

KE = 1/2m x V^2

Velocity is much more important than mass

27
Q

What is seen on entry wounds in:

Contact range

Intermediate range

Distant range

A

Contact range - marginal abrasion; soot/powder in depths of wound.

Intermediate range - marginal abrasion, powder/tattooing/stipping around wound

Distant range - marginal abrasion, no powder/tattooing/stipping, no soot/powder in depths of wound.

28
Q

What is the inner and outer table separated by in the adult skull?

A

A diploe

29
Q

How are entry and exit wounds described in the skull?

A

Entry wounds of outer table is sharply circumscribed, while the inner table is beveled.

If the buller has an exit wound, it is the opposite setup.

30
Q

Low velocity leads to:

High velocity leads to:

A

Low - small entry, no exit (or small exit)

High - relatively small entry, big exit.