When a young previously healthy person dies suddenly, occasionally, the scene is noncontributory and the autopsy and drug screen are negative. In such cases, additional studies, including genetic assessment and cardiac conduction system examination, should be performed. We performed a literature search and reviewed our own material to identify possible or definite conduction system anomalies that may cause death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Pathophysiology of function tricuspid regurgitation (FTR) is incompletely understood. We set out to comprehensively evaluate geometric and tissue remodelling of the tricuspid valve complex in ovine FTR.
Methods: Twenty adult sheep underwent left thoracotomy and pulmonary artery banding (PAB) to induce right heart pressure overload and FTR.
Volatile chemicals can be relevant in the determination of the cause and manner of death by forensic pathologists. Isopropanol is a secondary alcohol that is occasionally seen on postmortem toxicology testing. A series of 11 forensic autopsy cases was previously reported in which the presence of isopropanol in the vitreous humor was suspected to be due to postmortem contamination from the body preparation process for tissue procurement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Pathol
February 2023
We discuss the pathophysiology and epidemiology of Toxocara catis infection complicated by visceral larval migrans . We describe a previously healthy 19-month-old white male child found dead in bed by his mother. He had what was thought to be an upper respiratory infection for several days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 40-year-old woman presented with recurrent syncope. She reported multiple (>20) episodes of non-prodromal loss of consciousness, periodically provoked by physical exertion. One episode resulted in a nasal fracture due to the abrupt nature of her syncope.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the sudden unexpected death from exsanguination of a 60-year-old white female who underwent balloon angioplasty of her right popliteal artery via a right common femoral arteriotomy 3 weeks before death. This resulted in a mycotic pseudoaneurysm of the right femoral artery that ruptured, causing fatal exsanguination. A pseudoaneurysm is an arterial wall defect in which part of the wall consists of fibrin and fibrous tissue, lacking components of the normal arterial wall, that is intima, media, and adventitia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Res
May 2019
Cystic tumour of the atrioventricular node is the smallest tumour that can cause sudden cardiac death. This lesion arises from foregut endodermal rests which become enfolded into the heart during embryogenesis. Typically causing heart block, the tumour can cause sudden death despite pacemaker placement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Forensic Med Pathol
June 2019
We describe an 8-year-old white boy with a history of fetal alcohol syndrome and pica, who was found dead on the floor by his mother. The child died from massive intestinal dilatation causing asphyxia. We discuss the potential pathogenetic mechanisms of intestinal dilation in patients with fetal alcohol syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Immediately fatal motorcycle crashes have not been well characterized. This study catalogues injuries sustained in fatal motorcycle crashes and assesses the impact of crash conditions on injury patterns.
Methods: Autopsy records from the office of the medical examiner of Kent County, MI and publicly available traffic reports were queried for information pertaining to motorcyclists declared dead on-scene between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2016.
We describe a 24-year-old man with a cystic hygroma of the left side of the lower neck that led to sudden death. Cystic hygroma (cystic lymphangioma) is a congenital malformation of the lymphatic system. The patient, who had a tracheostomy because of airway obstruction from the cystic hygroma, was found dead with his tracheostomy tube on the floor next to him.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiac fibromas are benign primary tumors composed of connective tissue and fibroblasts. These uncommon tumors are primarily found in the pediatric population, and their prevalence among the adult population is exceedingly rare. We report a case of an adult with nonspecific symptoms, who was subsequently found to have a solitary mass located in the left ventricle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Eosinophilic coronary periarteritis (ECPA) is a rare disease found in cases of sudden cardiac death due to coronary vasospasm or spontaneous coronary artery dissection. Currently, the etiology, pathogenesis, and pathophysiology of ECPA are unknown. Cases of ECPA with a history of allergic disorders are rare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExcessive ethanol consumption is a leading preventable cause of death in the United States. Much of the harm from ethanol comes from those who engage in excessive or hazardous drinking. Rectal absorption of ethanol bypasses the first pass metabolic effect, allowing for a higher concentration of blood ethanol to occur for a given volume of solution and, consequently, greater potential for central nervous system depression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Amphetamines have been reported to cause myocardial infarct, cerebral hemorrhage, aortic dissection, hypertension, vasculitis, aneurysms, and, occasionally, death from direct toxicity. To date, there have been no reports of coronary intimal hyperplasia in an amphetamine user.
Methods: A 29-year-old male was found collapsed after jogging.
Background: To determine the incidence, time course, and severity of pulmonary fat embolism (PFE) and cerebral fat embolism (CFE) in trauma and nontrauma patients at the time of autopsy.
Methods: Prospectively, consecutive patients presenting for autopsy were evaluated for evidence pulmonary and brain fat embolism. The lung sections were obtained from the upper and lower lobe of the patients' lungs on the right and left and brain tissue.
J Emerg Trauma Shock
April 2011
Fat embolism syndrome (FES) is defined as an uncommon life-threatening disease process consisting of pulmonary, central nervous system (CNS), and cutaneous manifestations. The pathophysiology of this secondary injury is poorly understood. In the setting of the multiply injured patient, the diagnosis of FES is difficult to ascertain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAortic valve replacement with stentless xenografts has become routine since their introduction in the early 1990s. Although concerns of structural valve deterioration and long-term durability have been voiced, the reports on the causes or pathology associated with early valve failure have been sparse. We report two unusual cases of failure leading to patient death within the first year after implantation of the aortic valve and root with the Freestyle prostheses (Medtronic Inc, Minneapolis, MN).
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