AI Article Synopsis

  • A man in his 30s was found dead after multiple insulin injections in his abdomen.
  • Autopsy results revealed tissue damage in the lungs and brain, with high insulin levels at the injection sites but low in the blood and kidneys.
  • Determining the cause of death from insulin injections can be complicated, as elevated insulin is usually localized at the injection site rather than in systemic circulation.

Article Abstract

A man in his 30s injected insulin several times into his abdomen and was found dead several hours later. Micropathological findings showed alveolar injury with hemorrhaging and cerebral parietal lobe nerve cell edema. Biochemical examinations showed that the blood insulin level was high, significantly so at the insulin injection sites. The blood glucose and C-peptide levels were low. The insulin level in the kidneys was low. In forensic medicine, a postmortem diagnosis of insulin subcutaneous injection is often difficult. When insulin injection is suspected, particularly high insulin levels can be expected at the insulin injection site, rather than in the blood.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9334236PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.7364-21DOI Listing

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