| Literature DB >> 35488928 |
Safa Al-Sarraj1,2, Claire Troakes3, Guy N Rutty4.
Abstract
The accumulation of βAPP caused by axonal injury is an active energy-dependent process thought to require blood circulation; therefore, it is closely related to the post-injury survival time. Currently, the earliest reported time at which axonal injury can be detected in post-mortem traumatic brain injury (TBI) tissue by βAPP (Beta Amyloid Precursor Protein) immunohistochemistry is 35 min. The aim of this study is to investigate whether βAPP staining for axonal injury can be detected in patients who died rapidly after TBI in road traffic collision (RTC), in a period of less than 30 min.We retrospectively studied thirty-seven patients (group 1) died very rapidly at the scene; evidenced by forensic assessment of injuries short survival, four patients died after a survival period of between 31 min and 12 h (group 2) and eight patients between 2 and 31 days (group 3). The brains were comprehensively examined and sampled at the time of the autopsy, and βAPP immunohistochemistry carried out on sections from a number of brain areas.βAPP immunoreactivity was demonstrated in 35/37 brains in group 1, albeit with a low frequency and in a variable pattern, and with more intensity and frequency in all brains of group 2 and 7/8 brains from group 3, compared with no similar βAPP immunoreactivity in the control group. The results suggest axonal injury can be detected in those who died rapidly after RTC in a period of less than 30 min, which can help in the diagnosis of severe TBI with short survival time.Entities:
Keywords: Axonal injury; Beta Amyloid Precursor Protein (βAPP); Forensic Neuropathology; Road traffic collision; Traumatic brain injury
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Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35488928 PMCID: PMC9375765 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-022-02807-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.791
Details of cause of death and evidence of rapid death ( death at the scene) for group 1, and the recorded timing of survival according to the hospital notes for group 2 (short survival time) who survived between 31 min and 12 h after the RTA and group 3: (long survival time) comprised who had survived between 2 to 31 days after the RTA3.
| Group 1: (rapid death at the scene) | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chest injuries and abdominal injuries | Laceration of the heart, transacted aorta with severe abdominal injuries but without bleeding consistent with few minutes survival |
| 2 | Head, chest and spinal injuries | Exact time of incident is unknown. There is small amounts of bleeding to injuries so a few minutes survival is expected |
| 3 | Head, chest and abdominal injuries | Very severe chest and abdominal injuries including major vessel avulsion and tears bu there are no significant haemorrhages, therefore consistent with rapid death |
| 4 | Head, chest and abdominal injuries | Severe chest injuries. The patient suffered cardiac within few minutes at scene |
| 5 | Severe chest, abdominal and head injuries | Lacerations of heart, lung, liver, spleen and major blood vessels. Reported rapid cardiac arrest at the scene |
| 6 | Chest abdominal and pelvic injuries | Full thickness lacerations of the heart, liver and spleen with small amounts of bleeding consistent with few minutes’ survival |
| 7 | Chest injuries | Severe chest injuries with torn pericardium, ruptured heart and blood in chest consistent with few minute survivals. There is lack of blood to abdomen with liver tears support this view |
| 8 | Severe head injury | The driver’s car was rotating and then rolled, when the door came out and his head struck the carriageway sustaining severe head injury, fracture of sternum, laceration of the lung but with small amounts of bleeding consistent with survival of few minutes |
| 9 | Severe Chest and abdominal injuries | Liver lacerations, spinal injuries at C1,C2, fracture of sternum and pelvis, extensive liver lacerations but small amounts of bleeding consistent with survival of few minutes |
| 10 | Severe Head injury and abdominal injuries | Severe head injury and absence of bleeding in association with abdominal organ injuries consistent with survival of few minutes |
| 11 | Severe head injury | Extensive head injury with cerebral hemispheres avulsed from brainstem which incompatible with life therefore death was rapid and expected in few minutes |
| 12 | Severe head and neck injuries | Severe neck injuries and decapitation at C1 level which are care incompatible with life and so death wasSy rapid expected to be of few minutes |
| 13 | Severe head and chest injuries | Severe thoracic and abdominal injuries with minimal blood including a near complete avulsed heart, therefore death was very rapid and expected within few minutes |
| 14 | Chest injuries | Transected aorta with chest blood as well as a liver laceration with small amounts of bleeding, therefore consistent with rapid death within few minutes |
| 15 | Head injury and multiple organ injuries | Extensive multi system organ injury including large liver laceration with small amounts of abdominal bleeding consistent with rapid death of a few minutes |
| 16 | Severe head, chest and abdominal injuries | Significant abdominal trauma including marked lacerations of liver and ruptured diaphragm with small amounts of bleeding consistent with rapid death of few minutes |
| 17 | Severe abdominal injuries and head injuries | Severe abdominal trauma including liver lacerations with 2.5 L of blood in abdomen. Death took minutes for blood to accumulate in abdomen which is consistent with rapid death of few minutes. |
| 18 | Severe head injury | The extensive abdominal and head injury incompatible with life so virtually death was rapid and expected within few minutes |
| 19 | Severe chest injuries | Transected aorta and inferior vena cava with blood in pleural cavity consistent with rapid death of only few minutes |
| 20 | Severe chest injuries | Transected aorta and lacerations of liver and spleen with blood in pleural and abdominal cavities consistent with rapid death of few minutes only |
| 21 | Severe head injury | 23 min between incident and pronouncement by paramedics of death. But due to the severity of the head injury and lack of bleeding in abdomen considering liver injury death was expected to be extremely rapid and in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 22 | Severe chest injuries | Due to the extensive nature of the chest injuries including a transected aorta with little blood loss and displaced heart to right pleural cavity death would be very rapid and in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 23 | Postural asphyxia due to inverted position resulting from a road traffic collision | The victim was in pulseless Electric Activity (PEA) within 3 min of incident and declared dead |
| 24 | head injury and chest and abdominal injuries | Lack of bleeding in the chest and abdominal cavity despite major skeletal and organ trauma including lacerations of liver, spleen and kidneys death is expected to be rapid in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 25 | Chest injuries and intoxication with ethanol, mephedrone and amphetamine | Major aortic tear with associated haemopericardium in keeping with rapid death of a few minutes only |
| 26 | Head, chest and abdominal injuries | Due to the severity of the injuries and minimal bleeding especially in abdomen with severe liver lacerations and lack of significant bleeding, death was expected to be very rapid and of few minutes |
| 27 | Neck/chest/abdominal injuries | Injuries with C1/C2 injury, transection of spinal cord, laceration of liver and spleen, raptured diaphragm and 1 L of blood in pleural cavity rapid death was expected to be in a few minutes |
| 28 | Severe chest and abdominal injuries including liver lacerations | Death announced at the scene – There was very little blood associated with liver lacerations, fractured sternum and cavity injuries supports rapid death and in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 29 | Severe neck injury | Survival was recorded about 3 min. This is an asphyxia type death from steering wheel crushing the laryngeal cartilage causing upper airway obstruction |
| 30 | Severe chest injuries including partial transection of aorta | Complete aortic transection with haemothorax consistent with survival of a few minutes only |
| 31 | Severe chest injuries including lung lacerations and aortic rupture | Split pericardium, tears in left ventricle, transection of aorta, tears in liver. Due to severity of chest, cardiac and aortic injuries, and death expected to be rapid and in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 32 | Severe head and chest injuries | Severe spinal cervical injury and lack of bleeding from abdominal and chest injuries death is expected to be rapid and in keeping to be within few minutes |
| 33 | Severe head injury | Dislocation fracture of C1 and transection of the spinal cord. Due to nature and extent of injuries, death is expected to be rapid and in keeping to be with few minutes |
| 34 | Chest injuries | severe traumatic chest injury with aortic tear, severe thoracic spine injury and bilateral pleural cavity bleeds. The victim was in cardiac arrest at scene within few minutes |
| 35 | Head injury and spinal injuries | Head injury with severe thoracic spinal and rib fractures and spinal cord injury death is expected to be rapid in keeping within few minutes |
| 36 | Chest and neck injuries | Transected aorta and full thickness laceration of the left ventricle but only associated with small amounts of bleeding. Death is expected to be rapid |
| 37 | Severe Neck injury | Sever nature of neck and spinal cord injury consistent with very rapid death of few minutes |
| 1 | Chest and pelvic injuries and head injury | 11 h and 56 min |
| 2 | Head injury | 10 h and 50 min |
| 3 | Abdominal aortic rupture and head injury | 1 h and 31 min |
| 4 | Head and pelvic injuries | 7 h and 49 min |
| 1 | Chest injuries and head injury | 4 days |
| 2 | Hypoxic/ischaemic brain injury secondary to head injury | 3 days |
| 3 | Propofol Syndrome and head injury | 3 days |
| 4 | Pneumonia complicating head injury | |
| 31 days | ||
| 5 | Head injury | 11 days |
| 6 | Head injury | 13 days |
| 7 | Pulmonary embolism due to deep venous thrombosis due to immobility secondary to head injury | 2 days |
| 8 | Head injury | 2 days |
Details of studied cases including main autopsy, post-mortem interval and summary of brain pathology and βAPP results in the white matter (WM), corpus callosum (CC), internal capsule (IC), cerebellum (Cb) and brain stem (BS) divided in three groups; Group 1: (rapid death) comprised of those who died at the scene of the incident in few to several minutes but less than 30 min, Group 2: (short survival time) comprising those who survived between 31 min and 12 h after the RTA, Group 3: (long survival time) comprising those who survived between 2 and 31 days after the RTC and Group 4 (control) comprising patients who died from sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) or died rapidly and unexpectedly following cancer diagnosis
| Group 1: (rapid death) comprised of those who died at the scene of the incident in few to several minutes but less than 30 min | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 47 M | Scalp bruises | 84 h | Thin SDH, SAH | 1380 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 2 | 47 M | Scalp haemorrhage, periosteal haemorrhages | 37 h | SAH, thin SDH, basal brain contusions ( frontal and temporal) | 1080 g | + | + | + | -ve | + | |
| 3 | 21 M | Large scalp laceration, skull fracture (frontal and parietal bones) | 64 h | SAH | 1550 g | + | + | + | -ve | + | |
| 4 | 51 M | Scalp bruises | 46 h | SAH | 1350 g | + | + | + | + | + | |
| 5 | 56 M | Deep scalp bruises, basal skull fractures | 72 h | SAH | 1500 g | + | + | + | + | + + + | |
| 6 | 56 M | Scalp bruises | 72 h | SAH | 1410 g | + | + | + | + | + + | |
| 7 | 26 M | Skull fracture left orbital bone | 82 h | Thin SDH, SAH | 1628 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 8 | 51 M | Scalp laceration, multiple fractured skull, | 72 h | SAH, brain contusions | 1480 g | + | + | + | + | + | |
| 9 | 48 F | Scalp bruises | 92 h | Thin SAH | 1230 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 10 | 55 M | Diffuse scalp haemorrhages, multiple skull fracture including hing skull fracture ( fatal single occupancy airplane crush) | 48 h | SAH | 1460 g | + + | + | -ve | + | -ve | |
| 11 | 49 M | Extensive scalp haemorrhages, hinge/base /plate skull fractures, C1fracture | 13 h | SAH, cerebral hemispheres avulsed from brainstem | 1400 g | + | + | + | + | -ve | |
| 12 | 24 M | Scalp laceration,, hinge skull fracture, internal decapitation at C1 | 57 h | Diffuse SAH | 1400 g | + | + | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 13 | 65 M | Scalp haematoma, complex skull fracturs, lower cervical spine fracture | 34 h | Patchy SAH | 1200 g | + | + | + | + | + | |
| 14 | 51 M | Scalp bruises | 72 h | SAH, contusion | 1450 g | + + | + + + | + + | + + | + + + | |
| 15 | 18 F | Scalp bruises | 96 h | SAH, multiple brain contusions | 1300 g | + | + | + | + | + | |
| 16 | 21 M | Scalp bruises and laceration, C1 fracture with widening of space between this and skull | 72 h | SAH, epidural haemorrhage, spinal cord injury | 1200 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 17 | 18 F | Deep scalp bruises | 72 h | SAH, contusions | 1200 g | -ve | -ve | + | -ve | + + | |
| 18 | 14 F | Scalp bruises, multiple skull fractures, | 24 h | Severe brain lacerations and contusions, SAH and multiple small intra cerebral haemorrhages | 1300 g | + | + | + | -ve | + | |
| 19 | 25 M | None | 38 h | Unremarkable | 1600 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 20 | 41 M | T11,T12 vertebral fractures | 45 h | Unremarkable | 1380 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 21 | 60 M | Hinge skull fracture, spinal fracture | 47 h | extensive SAH, spinal cord injury | 1450 g | + | + | + | -ve | + | |
| 22 | 67 M | Facial skeleton fracture | 69 h | Unremarkable | 1750 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 23 | 30 M | spinal fracture at C5 level | 96 h | Thin SDH over cerebrum and SDH at C5,6 | 1550 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 24 | 21 F | Skull fracture in the occipital bone extending to base of skull | 58 h | SAH, petechial brain haemorrhages, brainstem haemorrhages | 1310 g | -ve | + | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 25 | 26 M | scalp bruises | 48 h | Large SDH, | 1450 g | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 26 | 25 M | Deep scalp bruises | 34 h | Brain haemorrhages including petechial haemorrhages in cerebral white matter, cerebellum and braistem | 1410 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 27 | 60 M | Extensive scalp, facial injuries, haemorrhage around upper cervical spine. Soft tissue disruption between C1 and C2 | 55 h | SAH | 1350 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 28 | 34 M | Central forehead, bridge of nose and philtrum bruises due to frontal facial impact | 43 h | SAH and thin SDH | 1464 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 29 | 33 M | Scalp bruises | 63 h | SAH | 1290 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 30 | 21 M | Scalp swelling across the vertex | NA | SAH | 1450 g | + | -ve | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 31 | 39 M | Left parietal periosteal bleed | 35 h | Epidural haemorrhage and SAH | 1590 g | + + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 32 | 54 M | separation of soft tissues between C1 and C2, odontoid peg fracture | 120 h | Thin SAH, brain stem haemorrhages, contusions, tear of corpus callosum, contusion to temporal lobe, | 1500 g | -ve | + | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 33 | 18 F | hinge fracture, C1 and base of skull dislocation | 96 h | SAH, Ponto-medullary contusion | 1340 g | + | + | + | -ve | + | |
| 34 | 90 M | Posterior scalp injury, thoracic spine injury | 131 h | SAH | 1457 g | + | + | + | -ve | -ve | |
| 35 | 55 M | Scalp bruises, | 29 h | SAH, brain contusions in the occipital lobe | 1200 g | -ve | -ve | -ve- | -ve | + | |
| 36 | 32 M | Scalp bruises,, internal decapitation at c1/c2 and fracture in upper thoracic spine | 55 h | Diffuse SAH, | 1700 g | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 37 | 52 F | posterior scalp haemorrhage, depressed skull fracture right frontal region with extension,, internal decapitation with C1 dislocation as well as C7 fracture | 69 h | Diffuse SAH | 1240 g | + | Ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | |
| 1 | 65 M | Scalp bruises, C4/5 fracture | 14 h | 120 h | Brain swelling SDH, SAH, spinal haemorrhages | 1500 g | + + | + + | + + | -ve | -ve |
| 2 | 26 M | Scalp bruises | 11 h | 53 h | Brain contusion, SDHs, SAH, brain swelling | 1540 g | + | + | + | + | + + + |
| 3 | 78 M | Scalp bruises | 31 min | 68 h | Mild SAH on the temporal lobes, cerebellum and base of brain extending to upper cervical spinal cord | 1480 g | + | + | + | + | + |
| 4 | 79 M | Scalp bruises, | 8 h | 60 h | SDH, SAH, white matter haemorrhages in the frontal and temporal lobes | 1250 g | + + + | + + | + | + | + + + |
| 1 | 41 M | displaced spine fracture | 4 days | 31 h | SDH, oedema, | 1500 g | + | + | -ve | -ve | + |
| 2 | 55 M | Scalp bruises | 3 days | 111 h | Intra cerebral Haemorrhages, ischaemia/hypoxia, swollen brain | 1430 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | + |
| 3 | 16 F | Scalp bruises, occipital bone fracture, | 3 days | 47 h | SAH, SDH | 1560 g | + | + + | + | + + | + |
| 4 | 63 M | Head injurycraniotomy | 31 days | 144 h | brain swelling, | 1450 g | -ve | + | + | -ve | + |
| 5 | 87 M | Scalp bruises | 10 days | 120 h | Temporal lobe contusions SAH, SDH and intra cerebral haemorrhages | 1360 g | + + | + + + | + + + | -ve | -ve |
| 6 | 81 F | Scalp bruises, | 13 days | 120 h | brain atrophy | 1030 g | + | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 7 | 47 M | Scalp bruises, | 2 days | 58 h | brain contusion and haemorrhages | 1400 g | + + + | + + + | + + | + | + |
| 8 | 65 M | Scalp bruises, skull fracture, | 2 days | 126 | SAH, SDH and contusions | 1650 g | + + + | + + + | + + | + + | + + |
| 1 | 18 F | Found dead; history of repeated epilepsy episodes | Unremarkable | Found dead | 1275 g | 61 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 2 | 49 M | Witnessed epileptic fit, collapsed, cardiac arrest | Unremarkable | Rapid after epileptic fit within minutes | 1352 g | 54 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 3 | 40 F | Cardiac respiratory arrest after witnessed epileptic fit | Nodular grey matter hetero | Rapid after epileptic fit within minutes | 1215 g | 78 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 4 | 24 M | Found dead in bed, known history of chronic epilepsy | Unremarkable | Found dead assuming rapid death after epileptic fit | 1326 g | 66 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 5 | 72 F | Metastatic carcinoma of unknown origin to the Lung and liver | Unremarkable | Found dead in the hospice | 1328 | 47 h | + | ||||
| Non Specific | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | |||||||
| 6 | 69 F | Recently diagnosed with a pancreatic body carcinoma with liver metastases | Unremarkable | Deteriorated and died in short time | 1288 | 58 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
| 7 | 51 M | Lung adenocarcinoma developed pleural and cardic effusion | Unremarkable | Rapidly deteriorated and died | 1386 | 33 h | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve | -ve |
Fig. 1Case 15 group 1. 18-year-old female. Driver of car in an RTC. Died at the scene. The deceased had TBI with subarachnoid haemorrhages, brain contusions and multi-organ injuries. She was considered to have died instantaneously / near instantaneously. There is a small focus of βAPP immunoreactivity in the corpus callosum (X630) as a small globule representing early axonal swelling attached to a short axonal staining
Fig. 2Case 16 group 1. 21-year-old male. Driver of a car in an RTC. Died at scene. The deceased had head, chest and abdominal injuries. Death was considered to have been rapid if not near instantaneous based on the injuries sustained. There are small foci of βAPP immunoreactivity (X1000) in the corpus callosum (A), Cerebral white matter (B), Cerebellar white matter (C) and pons(D)
Fig. 3Case 4 group 2. 79-year-old pedestrian. Taken to hospital with head injury (SDH, SAH, WM haemorrhages). Died 8 h after incident. There are more frequent (Fig A X400) and more intensely stained (Fig B X 1000) βAPP accumulations in the corpus callosum compared with the case in Fig. 1 and 2
Fig. 4Case 3 group 3. 16-year-old male. Unrestrained passenger ejected from his seat during an RTC. Taken to hospital with a skull fracture, SAH, and SDH. Died in the hospital 3 days after incident
Fig. 5Case of 72-year-old female patient who was diagnosed with metastatic carcinoma of unknown origin to the liver and lung. She died suddenly and unexpectedly after being observed well an hour earlier. There is a single spot of βAPP accumulation as small globules with faint and granular staining in the cerebral white matter consistent with a non-specific axonal injury. The βAPP was negative in other examined regions in the brain