Publications by authors named "Tatsushige Fukunaga"

When death is caused by a disease, the precise cause of the death must be determined to promote health and contribute to prevention efforts. The circumstances of death should also be clarified so that measures can be taken to prevent the recurrence. Statistics regarding the cause of death must be accurate, and such statistics are shaped by the determination of the cause of death.

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Radiotherapy, one of the standard therapies for lung cancer management, may cause severe late complications. In this case report, we describe the forensic autopsy report of a middle-aged man who died from a massive hemoptysis due to a bronchus-pulmonary artery fistula that developed 19 years after radiotherapy. The man, in his 50 s, suddenly developed hemoptysis at home and collapsed.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 34-year-old man with no major health issues died suddenly after experiencing nausea; an autopsy revealed severe lymphocyte infiltration and blockage in his coronary arteries.
  • The findings suggested his death resulted from isolated necrotizing vasculitis, likely resembling polyarteritis nodosa, although the specific pathology may differ from classic presentations of the disease.
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The mortality rate of aortic aneurysm/dissection is low in Japan. Two surgical procedures, the thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) and the open stent-grafting have contributed much in survival of such aneurysmal patients. We encountered with two autopsy cases of death by aortic rupture with fistula formation after these procedures.

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Bath-related deaths occur frequently in Japan, particularly in the elderly population; however, this fact is not sufficiently well known by the public. The advent of a super-aging society will expose general physicians to more cases of fatal and nonfatal bath-related accidents. As many of the victims have one or more lifestyle-related diseases, general physicians will play a more important role in preventing these fatalities in the future.

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Purpose: Bath-related deaths occur frequently in Japan, and many of these deaths are diagnosed as death from disease without autopsy in the current Japanese death-investigation system. Therefore, we aimed to examine the postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) findings of bath-related deaths to determine if PMCT can differentiate between real cases of drowning and sudden deaths not related to drowning.

Methods: Bath-related deaths were sampled from all autopsies conducted at the Tokyo Medical Examiner's Office from September 2015 to August 2016.

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Background: There are no detailed reports, in terms of epidemiology and pathology, on intracranial aneurysms and on dissections that were found in unexpected fatal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) cases. In this report we analyzed, based on large-sized medicolegal autopsy cases, the detailed epidemiology and pathological aspects of both lesions.

Methods: We analyzed 607 autopsy cases of unexpected fatal SAHs including 496 aneurysms and 111 dissections.

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Brotizolam is a short-acting hypnotic in the benzodiazepine family, and fatal poisonings by an overdose of brotizolam are rare. This report describes 4 cases of deaths associated with brotizolam poisoning from a single drug overdose. The ages ranged from 51 to 90 years, and the postmortem interval between death and tissue sampling was 1.

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Background The number of welfare recipients has steadily increased in Japan during recent years, although the number of homeless persons has decreased. Despite there being many reports regarding medicolegal death among homeless persons, medicolegal death among welfare recipients has not been fully investigated. Methods We identified 10,293 individuals who received welfare aid during their lifetime among the 81,867 cases that were examined by the Tokyo Medical Examiner's Office (2008-2013).

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In this study, electrolyte (sodium (Na), chlorine (Cl), and magnesium (Mg)) and total protein (TP) concentrations and volume of liquid in the sphenoid sinus were examined to determine their usefulness to elucidate whether drowning occurred in freshwater or seawater. We examined 68 cases (seawater drowning group: 27 cases, freshwater drowning group: 21 cases, non-drowning group: 20 cases). There was a significant difference in Na, Cl, Mg, and TP concentrations of liquid in the sphenoid sinus among the three groups (seawater drowning, freshwater drowning, and non-drowning groups).

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