| Literature DB >> 35581374 |
Korbinian Lackermair1, Florian Fischer2, Johannes Manhart3, Eva Scheurer4,5, Matthias Graw2, Diana Boy3, Claudia Lenz4,5, Bonnie Hartrampf6, Antonia Kellnar6, Lauren Sams6, Heidi Estner6, Stephanie Fichtner6.
Abstract
Postmortal interrogation of cardiac implantable electrical devices (CIED) may contribute to the determination of time of death in forensic medicine. Recent studies aimed to improve estimation of time of death by combining findings from autopsy, CIED interrogation and patients´ medical history. CIED from deceased undergoing forensic autopsy were included, if time of death remained unclear after forensic assessment. CIED explanted from deceased with known time of death were analysed as a control cohort. CIED were sent to our device interrogation lab and underwent analysis blinded for autopsy findings, medical history and police reports. The accuracy of time of death determination and the accuracy of time of death in the control cohort served as primary outcome. A total of 87 CIED were analysed. The determination of time of death was possible in 54 CIED (62%, CI 52-72%). The accuracy of the estimated time of death was 92.3% in the control cohort. Certain CIED type and manufacturers were associated with more successful determination. Blinded postmortal analysis enables a valid determination of the time of death in the majority of CIED. Analysis of explanted CIED in a cardiological core lab is feasible and should be implemented in forensic medicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35581374 PMCID: PMC9112646 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-12390-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Device interrogation. Firstly, leads were removed using a specific screw driver to avoid lead cutting noise overwriting the internal device memory. Thereafter the device was sent to the device interrogation core lab and was analysed blinded to autopsy results.
Figure 2Pie charts illustrating the composition of the CIED cohort. (A): CIED manufacturers are depicted. In 2 CIED total battery depletion disabled interrogation. CIED type and manufacturer were not recorded. (B): CIED analysed were predominantly dual chamber devices. Devices for cardiac resynchronisation therapy (with 3 leads) played a minor role.
Figure 3(A): Pie chart depicting the success of the determination of time of death (not possible, exact within a day, exact within an hour). (B): Primary method of estimation is depicted. (C): A significant difference in the primary method of estimation is visualized between CIED with an estimation of time of death within an exact hour and within a day (p < 0.01).
Figure 4Differences in success rates of determination of time of death. (A): Determination of time of death was significantly more frequent in ICD devices (p < 0.01). (B): The number of leads is not significant with respect to the determination of time of death. (C): Relevant differences exist depending on CIED manufacturer (p < 0.01).