Forensic postmortem computed tomography in suspected unnatural adult deaths.

Eur J Radiol

Department of Radiology, Jena University Hospital, Am Klinikum 1, 07747, Jena, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the effectiveness of forensic postmortem CT scans in determining the cause of death in suspected unnatural adult deaths, using autopsies as the reference standard.
  • Data from 64 out of 94 corpses (averaging 47.4 years old) revealed a strong agreement between CT findings and autopsy results for identifying the primary cause of death, achieving 85.9% agreement without considering toxicological and histological findings.
  • Forensic CT showed high sensitivity and specificity in recognizing various causes of death, including acute heart failure and gunshot wounds, while the agreement on secondary causes was moderate, indicating that postmortem CT is a valid tool for establishing primary causes of death in

Article Abstract

Purpose: Our study sought to evaluate validity of forensic postmortem CT in establishing cause of death (COD) in suspected unnatural adult death based on the reference standard of autopsy.

Methods: In our prospective, single-center study, 64 of 94 consecutive corpses (70.7 % male, mean age: 47.4 years) who underwent CT and autopsy between November 2013 and April 2019 were included in the analysis. Primary objective was agreement between CT and autopsy on primary COD using kappa statistics. Secondary objectives were competing COD and specific pathological findings.

Results: Agreement on primary COD between forensic CT and autopsy without or in consideration of toxicological and histological findings was strong (85.9 % [55 of 64 corpses]; κ = 0.83 [95 %CI: 0.74 to 0.93] and 95.3 % [61 of 64 corpses]; κ = 0.94 [95 %CI: 0.84-1.04], respectively, McNemar p = 0.03). Sensitivity and specificity of CT in identification of acute heart failure, intracranial bleeding, burns and heat shocks, gunshot wounds, polytrauma, cranio-cerebral trauma, and strangulation or hanging was 100 %, each. Acute respiratory failure was detected with a sensitivity and specificity of 100 % and 96.8 %, cuts and stab wounds with 95.2 % and 100 %, and intoxication, pneumonia, or gastrointestinal bleeding with 60.0 % and 100 %, respectively. Agreement on competing COD was moderate (51.6 %, [33 of 64 corpses]; κ = 0.47 [95 %CI: 0.40 to 0.53], p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Forensic postmortem CT, complemented by external, toxicological, and histological examination was sufficiently valid to assess primary COD in the majority of suspected unnatural deaths with few restrictions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrad.2020.109297DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

[95 %ci
12
forensic postmortem
8
suspected unnatural
8
unnatural adult
8
primary cod
8
competing cod
8
sensitivity specificity
8
cod
5
postmortem computed
4
computed tomography
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!