| Literature DB >> 33320985 |
Yoichiro Takahashi1, Rie Sano1, Akira Hayakawa1, Haruki Fukuda1, Rieko Kubo1, Takafumi Okawa1, Hiroyuki Tokue2, Hiroyuki Takei3, Yoshihiko Kominato1.
Abstract
With the increasing use of postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) in medicolegal autopsies, three-dimensional (3D) models of injured areas can now be generated from multislice computed tomography images. However, since PMCT has low sensitivity for detecting injuries in solid organs in the absence of contrast administration, it has been difficult to demonstrate the tracks of stab wounds leading to solid organ injury using 3D reconstruction. Here, we report one homicide case with two stab wounds. On the skin surface, the stab wounds were located on the neck and anterior chest wall. A medicolegal autopsy revealed that one stab wound in the neck had penetrated the wall of the right pleural cavity and the upper portion of the right lung whereas the other stab wound in the anterior chest wall had penetrated the right diaphragm and the heart. To illustrate the tracks of the stab wounds, superimposed CT images of the body, the excised organ, and a knife model were constructed to obtain a 3D model. This allowed clear and concise visualization of the complex relationship of the knife to the heart incision and the stab wound on the chest surface.Entities:
Keywords: autopsy; forensic imaging; forensic pathology; medicolegal evidence; postmortem computed tomography; stab wound
Year: 2020 PMID: 33320985 DOI: 10.1111/1556-4029.14653
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Forensic Sci ISSN: 0022-1198 Impact factor: 1.832