| Literature DB >> 29938388 |
A Viero1, M Montisci1, G Pelletti2, S Vanin3.
Abstract
The activity of arthropods on corpses has been largely investigated, since they can produce information to reconstruct the peri-mortem events. However, the feeding/movement activity of insects around the crime scene, among the clothes and on the body, can also cause some alterations that can lead to wrong reconstruction and misinterpretations. This article summarises all the post-mortem arthropods artefacts related to the scene (i.e. fly artefacts and floor stripes) and the body (i.e. skin and other soft tissue alterations, bone alterations and hair alterations) that can mislead the forensic pathologist, discussing macroscopic and microscopic findings derived from forensic casework and from experimental laboratory studies, in order to provide a useful instrument to avoid misinterpretations and evaluation errors. Finally, some procedural notes for the documentation and the interpretation of findings are proposed.Entities:
Keywords: Body artefacts; Crime scene alteration; Forensic entomology; Forensic pathology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29938388 PMCID: PMC6342896 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-018-1883-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.686
Features that can suggest the nature of suspect blood spots found during a crime scene investigation. In case of a group of spots, differentiation between bloodstains and FA relies on the comparison between the suspect spot(s) and other spots belonging to the same pattern. In case of a single spot, the differentiation is based on the assessment of some particular features that could be the result of fly activity. In both cases, there are not universal rules that can be followed for the distinction between bloodstain and FAs, solely based on macroscopic examination of the spots
| Multiple spots | Single spot | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bloodstain Pattern [ | Fly artefacts [ | Bloodstain pattern [ | Fly artefacts [ |
| Same colour and/or shade of colour | Different colour/colour shade | Spines/scalloped edges | No distinguishable tail and body |
| All spots of elliptical/circular shape | Different/irregular shape | Linear and/or multiple tails | Curved or non-linear tail |
| Relationship shape/impact angle | Tails with opposite directions | Body length > 20 mm | Tail longer than body with irregular morphology |
| Consistent directionality | Random directionality | Textured surface | |
| Radiating pattern | Absence of a point of convergence | Cratered appearance | |
| Linear/curvilinear orientation | Evidence of flow | ||
Fig. 1Floor stripes due to the wandering of maggots from the body to protected places where pupation occurs. If migrating from a surface soaked by blood or putrefactive liquid, maggots leave a linear wipe pattern, resulting in a series of trails produced by their typical crawling motion (Photo by S. Vanin)
Fig. 2Stripes due to the maggots’ movement from the body can be present as well on vertical surfaces. Stripes generally show a large base and a thinner end resulting from the progressive release of blood or other decomposition fluids on the surface (Photo by L. Bassi)
Fig. 3Circular skin lesion produced by maggots on the skin of a victim’s leg. Some damages of tissues may resemble to lesions inflicted ante-mortem (Photo by S. Vanin)
Post-mortem alterations associated with arthropod activity
| Taxon | Injury description | Differential diagnosis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin and other soft tissue alterations | Ants | - Small punctate or multifocal areas of skin loss with small linear trails bordering the primary erosion points. | - Abrasions, cigarette or strong acids scars. |
| Beetles | - Undulations, small pits, holes, grooves and tunnels in skin and connective tissues with bites on the edges of the wounds. | - Imprinted effect of a blunt or offending object. | |
| Crustaceans | - Extensive but superficial wounds with haemorrhagic aspect, variable shape and vague irregular outlines, varying from 3 to 10 mm. | - Chemical or deep second-degree burns. | |
| Cockroaches | - Small (< 0.6 cm), round physical artefacts on the skin. | - Burns. | |
| Mecoptera | - Round lesions of the epidermis and part of the superficial dermis, approximately 3–5 mm in diameter, with an alopecic border. The centre of the lesion is brown–red and slightly eroded. | - Cigarette scars. | |
| Bone alterations | Beetles, moths, wasps and termites | - Sub-parallel striations, edge gnawing, pits, holes, nests, tunnels and etching of the bone surface. | - Gunshot entrances. |
| Hair alterations | Beetles, moths | - Concave lesions caused by “gnawing” activity. | - Sharp force trauma. |
Fig. 4Irregular skin lesions of the arm produced by ant feeding activity on the cadaver. Ants can affect the interpretation of the tanatological data both removing fly larvae and producing post-mortem lesions orange-pink to yellow in colour diffusely scattered over the skin surface (Photo by L. Bassi)
Fig. 5Post-mortem skin lesions caused by sea isopods feeding activity on the cadaver. The same pattern was reported as well for fresh water amphipods (e.g. Niphargus sp.) [8] (Photo by L. Bassi)
Fig. 6Larder beetle (Coleoptera, Dermestidae) frass on a leg of a partially mummified body that appears as whitish ribbons (photo by S. Vanin)