Maria De Matteis1, Arianna Giorgetti2, Guido Viel3, Chiara Giraudo4, Claudio Terranova1, Amalia Lupi4, Paolo Fais2, Alessandra Puggioni1, Giovanni Cecchetto1, Massimo Montisci1. 1. Department of Legal and Occupational Medicine, Toxicology and Public Health, University of Padova, Via Falloppio 50, Padova, Italy. 2. DIMEC, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy. 3. Department of Legal and Occupational Medicine, Toxicology and Public Health, University of Padova, Via Falloppio 50, Padova, Italy. guido.viel@unipd.it. 4. Institute of Radiology, Department of Medicine (DiMED), University-Hospital Padova, Via Giustiniani 2, Padova, Italy.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The concealment of the body following a homicide undermines different moments of the forensic and medico-legal investigations. The aim of the present study is to provide an overview of the literature and the forensic casuistry of the Institute of Legal Medicine of Padova for analyzing and discussing diverse methodological approaches for the forensic pathologist dealing with covered-up homicides. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A literature review, updated until September 2019, was performed, and a literature pool of forensic cases was built. In-house cases were included by conducting a retrospective analysis of the forensic caseworks of Padova of the last 20 years. Data regarding epidemiology, methodology of assessment, methods of concealment, and answers to medico-legal issues were extracted for both data sets. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Seventy-eight papers were included in the literature review (78.2% being case reports or case series, 17% retrospective studies, and 6% experimental studies or reviews). Literature and in-house data sets consisted of 145 and 13 cases, respectively. Death scene investigation, radiology, toxicology, and additional analyses were performed in 20-54% of literature and 62-77% of in-house cases. Cover-up by multiple methods prevailed. Death was caused by head trauma in about 40% of cases (both data sets), strangulation in 21% of literature, and 7% of in-house cases, and was undetermined in 17% of literature and 7% of in-house cases. CONCLUSIONS: The methodology of ascertainment should be case-specific and based on a multidisciplinary and multimodal evaluation of all data, including those gained through novel radiological and/or analytical techniques.
INTRODUCTION: The concealment of the body following a homicide undermines different moments of the forensic and medico-legal investigations. The aim of the present study is to provide an overview of the literature and the forensic casuistry of the Institute of Legal Medicine of Padova for analyzing and discussing diverse methodological approaches for the forensic pathologist dealing with covered-up homicides. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A literature review, updated until September 2019, was performed, and a literature pool of forensic cases was built. In-house cases were included by conducting a retrospective analysis of the forensic caseworks of Padova of the last 20 years. Data regarding epidemiology, methodology of assessment, methods of concealment, and answers to medico-legal issues were extracted for both data sets. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Seventy-eight papers were included in the literature review (78.2% being case reports or case series, 17% retrospective studies, and 6% experimental studies or reviews). Literature and in-house data sets consisted of 145 and 13 cases, respectively. Death scene investigation, radiology, toxicology, and additional analyses were performed in 20-54% of literature and 62-77% of in-house cases. Cover-up by multiple methods prevailed. Death was caused by head trauma in about 40% of cases (both data sets), strangulation in 21% of literature, and 7% of in-house cases, and was undetermined in 17% of literature and 7% of in-house cases. CONCLUSIONS: The methodology of ascertainment should be case-specific and based on a multidisciplinary and multimodal evaluation of all data, including those gained through novel radiological and/or analytical techniques.
Entities:
Keywords:
Body disposal; Forensic radiology and toxicology; Omics sciences; Post-mortem examination
Authors: Mohammad Rahim Kamaluddin; Naji Arafat Mahat; Geshina Ayu Mat Saat; Azizah Othman; Ian Lloyd Anthony; Sowmya Kumar; Suzaily Wahab; Saravanan Meyappan; Balan Rathakrishnan; Fauziah Ibrahim Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-03-18 Impact factor: 3.390