| Literature DB >> 27025705 |
Markus Schmitt-Sody1, Stefanie Kurz1, Maximilian Reiser1, Karl Georg Kanz1, Chlodwig Kirchhoff1, Oliver Peschel1, Sonja Kirchhoff2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To analyze diagnostic accuracy of prompt post mortem Computed Tomography (pmCT) in determining causes of death in patients who died during trauma room management and to compare the results to gold standard autopsy during office hours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27025705 PMCID: PMC4812637 DOI: 10.1186/s13049-016-0231-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med ISSN: 1757-7241 Impact factor: 2.953
Overview of group I patients presenting good agreement of results in pmCT and autopsy (DD = differential diagnosis)
| ID | Cause of death - pmCT | Cause of death - autopsy | Region of death causing injury |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | subtotal amputation pelvic half/thigh amputation os ilium, open book fracture | amputation pelvis with consecutive blood loss | Skeletal system |
| 7 | brain steem bleeding, incarceration foramen magnum avulsion cervical myelon (C1/2) | basal skull fracture, brain bleeding, incarceration of medulla oblongata | head/neck |
| 8 | Multiple trauma: complex dislocated fracture skull/foramen magnum, subarachnoidal bleeding, ventricle tamponade brain edema, incarceration suspected aortic root rupture, hematothorax, lung contusion, Tension pneumothorax, disruption pericardium/heart | multiple trauma: destruction of basal skull, disruption of pons/medulla oblongata, ventricle tamponade, diffuse intracerebral bleeding disruption of lung/pericardium/heart, rupture of aortic root, hematothorax | head/neck chest |
| 13 | intracerebral, subdural, subarachnoidal bleeding brain edema, basal incarceration | bloody destruction, herniation frontal/temportal lobe with so-called intravital brain necrosis | head/neck |
| 14 | impression fracture skull brain edema, incarceration lung contusion DD signs of aspiration | brain injury with occipital impression fracture, brain contusion, brain edema blood aspiration lung | head/neck chest |
| 16 | brain edema atlas ring fracture, dislocated dens axis, intraspinal bleeding avulsion vertebral artery, suspected marrow injury cervical spine | gaping disconnection 1st and 2nd cervical vertebrae, atlas ring fracture with rupture upper cervical marrow | head/neck |
| 18 | brain edema due to oxygen lack (drowning) lung edema, fluid filled major airways | signs of drowning lung/distal airways brain edema | chest |
| 22 | bilateral rib fractures pleural effusion, bilateral hematothorax | bilateral rib fractures, hematothorax, pleural effusion with circulatory failure due to inner bleed to death | chest |
| 26 | signs of increased intracranial pressure, midline shiftintracranial bleeding, incarceration foramen magnum skull base fracture bony destruction pelvis | skull base fracture, subdural bleeding, signs of increased intracranial pressure, beginning incarceration complex destruction of bony pelvis, soft tissue hematoma retroperitoneal due to rupture internal iliac artery | head abdomen/pelvis |
Overview of group II patients presenting superior results in autopsy (detailed cause of death found in autopsy is marked bold)
| ID | Cause of death - autopsy | Cause of death - pmCT | Region of death causing injury |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| pleural effusion/hematothorax = signs of bleed to death | chest |
|
| Multiple trauma/inner bleed to death | suspected rupture iliac artery free intraabdominal fluid = signs of bleed to death lung contusion/pneumothorax, pleural effusion brain edema with upper and lower incarceration | skeletal system Head/neck Chest |
|
|
| no directly death causing injury reported | chest |
|
| Multiple trauma/circulatory collapse | suspected rupture aorta, not definitely recognized, pneumopericardium bilateral pneumothorax, bloody pleural effusion, pneumomediastinum serial rib fractures, bony injury pelvis, spine laceration of liver, rupture spleen | chest |
|
| Multiple trauma/inner bleed to death: complex fractures spine, pelvis, sacrum | complex fractures spine, pelvis, sacrum lung contusion, pneumothorax bilateral serial rib fractures retroperitoneal hematoma free intraabdominal fluid = signs of bleed to death | Skeletal system abdomen |
| 25 | Multiple trauma: brain edema, disruption articulation skull base-atlas | brain edema, disruption articulation skull base-atlas total rupture ascending aorta with bleeding soft tissue neck/mediastinum, pericardium with bilateral hematothorax pelvis fracture with soft tissue bleeding | Head/neck chest |
| 29 |
| hematothorax = signs of bleed to death status post open cardiac massage with serial rib fractures | chest |
Overview of group III patients with superior results on pmCT (additional findings on pmCT contributing to death but not majorly causing is marked bold)
| ID | Cause of death - pmCT | Cause of death - autopsy | Region causing death |
|---|---|---|---|
| 24 | fracture orbita, midface | fracture orbita, midface disruption pericardium with pericardial tamponade lung contusion, bilateral pneumothorax, blood serial rib fractures, lung disruption, soft tissue bleeding laceration liver | Skeletal system chest |
Fig. 1The soft-tissue-window of a cerebral CT of a young patient demonstrates the advantages of pmCT in terms of clearly showing intraventricular hemorrhage (a,*), subarachnoidal bleeding (see white arrows) along with subdural hematoma (see black arrows) on the left side (see (b) without changing the pressure-in situ. The display of CT in the bone window additionally demonstrates the multiple fragment fracture (#) of the calvarium as well as massive free intracranial air (see white arrows) (c)
Fig. 2CT-images of the chest after falling from a great height demonstrate in the lung window (a) extensive lung parenchymal lacerations (see black arrows) along with contusions of the lung (see white arrows). Pleural effusion (soft tissue window, b demonstrates blood-like density values along with condensed portions in terms of hematothorax (see #) and corresponding mediastinal shift towards the left side. However, the exact source of bleeding was only suspected and evaluated as bleed to death but not exactly detected on pmCT but stated by the gold standard autopsy in terms of aortic rupture as cause of death
Fig. 3CT of the cervial spine shows a type II dens fracture (#) with a dorsal dislocation of a fragment (*) towards the spinal canal (b). a also demonstrates an additional fracture of the left maxillary sinus (see white arrow) filled with blood (+) as another example of the great potential of diagnosing injuries to the bone especially of the face using CT