Surviving a transfixing gunshot wound to the head 70 years ago.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

Laboratory of Forensic Anthropology, Centre for Functional Ecology, Department of Life Sciences, University of Coimbra, 3000456, Coimbra, Portugal.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Surviving a gunshot wound to the head is rare, especially in the past when medical treatments were not as advanced, making this specific case from a 1946 skull in a museum collection particularly unusual.
  • This study explores the injury's details through various assessments including trauma classification and CT scan imaging to understand the nature of the wound and the circumstances of the incident.
  • The findings suggest the injury was likely caused by a low-velocity bullet, indicating a high probability of a suicide attempt, but the potential for homicide posing as a suicide also remains a possibility, emphasizing the educational value for forensic anthropology.

Article Abstract

Surviving a gunshot wound to the head is a rare event, particularly in the past when medical treatment was much less advanced than it is today. Moreover, the finding of such a case as an identified specimen within a museum collection is even more uncommon. This led us to report on this unique case in this paper as it poses a challenge to forensic anthropology and provides a unique educational oppourtunity. The skull from the Collection at the Cranium Museum in the Department of Morphology and Genetic at the Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP) dates back to 1946. For trauma registration the bone location, severity, trauma aetiology, trauma classification, description, callus formation, periosteal reaction, degree and success of repair, and an estimate of the time elapsed since the trauma, were all assessed. To explore the case radiologically a CT scan of the skull was performed. Considering the survival of the patient and the morphology of the wound it is likely that the injury was caused by a small calibre, low-velocity gunshot. The bullet path shows an almost vertical direction on the right side of the individual's splanchno and neurocranium. The path of the projectile is consistent with a suicide attempt, although the possibility of a homicide simulating a suicide cannot be discarded. This case highlights how informative such cases can be to the practice of forensic anthropology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6373328PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12024-018-0025-4DOI Listing

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