Selective postmortem arterial angiography of head and neck using digital x-ray or computed tomography: A practical and rapid method to identify vascular injuries.

J Forensic Sci

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Identifying injuries to blood vessels is really important for understanding how people died, especially in accidents, but it's often tricky in the head and neck area.
  • Researchers in Maryland developed a new way to check for these injuries using special catheters and a type of contrast liquid that makes the images clearer without causing a lot of damage.
  • This new method is easier for medical examiners to use and can help them do their jobs better, especially in busy offices where there are many injury cases to look at.

Article Abstract

Identification of vascular injuries is crucial for complete postmortem evaluation and understanding of trauma deaths by the Medical Examiner. Some vascular injuries are difficult to evaluate due to challenging anatomic locations, especially in the head and neck. Documenting injuries of the facial and vertebral arteries is challenging and necessitates time-consuming dissections that can create artifacts and disfigurement. In busy medical examiner offices with a significant number of traumatic injuries, finding a creative solution to employ reliable postmortem angiography is desirable. At the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for the State of Maryland (OCME), we created and effectively implemented a selective angiography procedure using traditional indwelling Foley catheters and water-soluble barium swallow contrast to evaluate arterial injuries using either digital radiography or computed tomography imaging modalities. This technique and imaging interpretation can be performed by a medical examiner or forensic pathology fellow after basic technical training and basic radiology training. This study outlines the technique, methods, and utilization of the procedure and describes the findings of six deaths due to vascular lesions from different injury mechanisms and disease processes and describes the ease of implementation on a broader scale in busy Medical Examiner's offices.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.15568DOI Listing

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