| Literature DB >> 31938832 |
Gábor Simon1, Viktor Soma Poór2, Veronika Heckmann2, Zsolt Kozma2, Tamás F Molnár3,4.
Abstract
The aim of our study was to examine the possible effect of steatosis and fibrosis on the blunt force vulnerability of human liver tissue. 3.5 × 3.5 × 2-cm-sized liver tissue blocks were removed from 135 cadavers. All specimens underwent microscopical analysis. The tissue samples were put into a test stand, and a metal rod with a square-shaped head was pushed against the capsular surface. The force (Pmax) causing liver rupture was measured and registered with a Mecmesin AFG-500 force gauge. Six groups were formed according to the histological appearance of the liver tissue: intact (group 1), mild steatosis (group 2), moderate steatosis (group 3), severe steatosis (group 4), fibrosis (group 5), and cirrhosis (group 6). The average Pmax value was 34.1 N in intact liver samples (range from 18.1 to 60.8 N, SD ± 8.7), 45.1 N in mild steatosis (range from 24.2 to 79.8 N SD ± 12.6), 55.4 N in moderate steatosis (range from 28.9 to 92.5 N, SD ± 16.0), 57.6 N in severe steatosis (range from 39.8 to 71.5 N, SD ± 11.9), 63.7 N in fibrosis (range from 37.8 to 112.2 N, SD ± 19.5), and 87.1 N in the case of definite cirrhosis (range from 52.7 to 162.7 N, 30.3). The Pmax values were significantly higher in samples with visible structural change than in intact liver sample (p = 0.023, 0.001, 0.009, 0.0001, 0.0001 between group 1 and groups 2 to 6 respectively). Significant difference was found between mild steatosis (group 2) and cirrhosis (group 6) (p = 0.0001), but the difference between mild, moderate, and severe steatosis (groups 2, 3, and 4) was not significant. Our study demonstrated that contrary to what is expected as received wisdom dictates, the diseases of the parenchyma (steatosis and presence of fibrosis) positively correlate with the blunt force resistance of the liver tissue.Entities:
Keywords: Blunt force injuries; Cirrhosis; Forensic pathology; Forensics; Liver; Steatosis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31938832 PMCID: PMC7181547 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-019-02245-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.791
Fig. 1The rectangular metal frame used for removing the samples from the liver
Fig. 2The force gauge and the test stand
Fig. 3The six groups formed based on the histological appearance (HE). a Intact liver. b Mild steatosis. c Medium-grade steatosis. d Severe steatosis. e Fibrosis. f Cirrhosis
Fig. 4The figure indicates lack of correlation between Pmax (N) and PMI (days)
Fig. 5The figure indicates lack of correlation between Pmax (N) of intact samples (group 1) and PMI (days)
Fig. 6Correlation of Pmax (N) and age (years) in the intact group, showing the linear trend line. Linear correlation between the two parameters were significant (p = 0.025, R2 = 0.122)
Peak pressure at the time of laceration in different histological groups
| Group | Age mean (range, SD±) (year) | PMI mean (range, SD±) (day) | Pmax mean (range) (N) | Pmax SD (N) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Int | 41 | 57.4 (4–88, 22.98) | 7.5 (1–17, 3.98) | 34.1 (18.1–60.8) | 8.7 |
| 2. Mil | 33 | 54.5 (19–89, 17.15) | 6.7 (2–20, 3.98) | 44.6 (24,2-79,8) | 12.6 |
| 3. Med | 12 | 57.4 (28–70, 11.56) | 6.3 (2–18, 4.84) | 55.4 (28,9-92,5) | 16.0 |
| 4. Sev | 6 | 63.3 (55–70, 9.56) | 6.5 (1–12, 4.50) | 57.6 (39,8–71,5) | 11.9 |
| 5. Fib | 11 | 65.2 (33–100, 21.3) | 7.7 (2–12, 3.43) | 65.5 (37,8-112,2) | 19.5 |
| 6. Cir | 16 | 65.5 (44–91, 12.89) | 8.8 (3–16, 4.03) | 87.1 (52.76–162.7) | 30.3 |
Fig. 7Pmax (N) values in the six histological groups. The Pmax values were significantly higher in samples with microscopic structural changes than in intact liver samples