| Literature DB >> 34196786 |
Guido Pelletti1, Desiree Martini2, Laura Ingrà2, Maria Carla Mazzotti1, Arianna Giorgetti3, Mirella Falconi2, Paolo Fais1.
Abstract
Insects found at a crime scene can produce traces referred to as fly artifacts (FA) due to their movement over the corpse and the manner in which they feed upon it. These can be detrimental for carrying out criminal investigations. Confusing a FA with a genuine bloodspot can lead to misinterpretations, also taking into consideration that FA may contain a human DNA profile. The aim of the present study was to employ scanning electron microscopy (SEM) for the analysis of FA produced by Calliphora vomitoria on hard surfaces and fabrics that are commonly present at crime scenes. FA and control bloodstains were produced under experimental conditions on metal, glass, plaster, cotton, and polyester. After macroscopic analysis, FA were examined at standard low (20-40 ×), medium low (300-600 ×), and high ultrastructural (1200 ×) magnification through a SEM Stereoscan 360, Leica, Cambridge. SEM analysis enabled the identification of distinctive features of FA on hard surfaces, namely, amorphous crystals, micro-crystals with a morphology similar to those of uric or micro-crystals with a comparable morphology to cholesterol, absent in controls. Moreover, red blood cells (RBC) were absent in FA but were always present in controls. On cotton, for both FA and controls, the drop was almost completely absorbed and thus indistinguishable from the underlying fabric texture. On polyester, FA showed amorphous/crystal-like deposits and no RBC, as observed on hard surfaces, except for those showing a completely flat surface. SEM analysis appeared to be suitable for differential diagnosis between FA and genuine bloodstains on hard surfaces, although the results may be inconclusive on tested fabrics.Entities:
Keywords: Bloodstain pattern analysis; Crime scene; Fly artifacts; Forensic pathology; Scanning electron microscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34196786 PMCID: PMC8813694 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-021-02634-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.686
Fig. 1FA deposited on hard surfaces, namely, glass (a-l), plaster (m-x), and metal (j-jj). The figure reports the visual analysis, the low magnification SEM analysis (SEM lm), and the high magnification SEM analysis (SEM hm) of dark color FA, light color FA, tailed FA, and genuine bloodspots (control)
Fig. 2FA deposited on fabrics, namely, cotton (a-i) and polyester (j-r). The figure reports the visual analysis, the low magnification SEM analysis (SEM lm), and the high magnification SEM analysis (SEM hm) of dark color FA, light color FA, and genuine bloodspots (control)
Gross visual features of FA on hard surfaces (glass, metal, polyester)
| Dark fly artifacts (DFA) | Light fly artifacts (LFA) | Tailed fly artifacts (TFA) | Controls (bloodspots) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Color | Red/brownish | Yellow/light brown | Red/brownish or yellow/light brown | Red/brownish |
| Shape of the body | Circular or elliptical | |||
| Surface | Flat, cratered, or textured | Textured | Flat or cratered | |
| Edges | Linear or slightly scalloped | |||
| Tail | Absent or shorter than the body | Absent or shorter than the body | Longer than the body | Absent or shorter than the body |
Gross visual features of FA on fabrics (cotton and polyester)
| Dark fly artifacts (DFA) | Light fly artifacts (LFA) | Controls (bloodspots) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Color | Red/brownish | Yellow/light brown | Red/brownish |
| Shape of the body | Circular or elliptical | Circular, elliptical, or linear | Circular or elliptical |
| Surface (cotton) | Reproduced the texture of the underlying cotton fabric | ||
| Surface (polyester) | Flat or cratered | Flat or textured | Flat or cratered |
| Edges (cotton) | Reproduced the underlying texture of the fabric | ||
| Edges (polyester) | Linear, sometimes slightly scalloped | ||
| Tail | Absent or shorter than the body | ||
Fig. 3Flow chart depicting how a fly artifact can be distinguished from a blood spot using SEM ultrastructural analysis