21 results match your criteria: "University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA[Affiliation]"

The significance of humorous tattoos.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

January 2025

Adelaide School of Biomedicine, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

Tattooing refers to the process of creating indelible designs and texts in the human skin by introducing a variety of dyes. It has found for millennia in a range of societies. The purpose of tattooing has ranged from marking individuals of significant social standing such as chieftains in Polynesia, to those who are regarded as outcasts such as prostitutes and criminals in Europe.

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The forensic implications of lonely deaths (Kodokushi) - A South Australian study.

J Forensic Leg Med

December 2024

School of Biomedicine, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, SA, 5001, Australia. Electronic address:

Kodokushi is a Japanese term where 'a person dies without being cared for by anyone, and whose body is found after a certain period'. These cases have also been called 'lonely deaths'. Few forensic studies exist.

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Cryptococcosis and unexpected death.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

December 2021

School of Anatomy and Pathology, University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

Cryptococcosis is a fungal disease caused predominantly by Cryptococcus neoformans and Cryptococcus gatti. It is most often found in immunocompromised individuals and has quite protean and chronic manifestations affecting all body systems. The unexpected death of a 22-year-old man with cryptococcal meningoencephalitis demonstrates, however, that it may have a fulminant course in previously well individuals.

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The feeding of animals on bodies after death - so-called post-mortem animal predation - may complicate autopsy interpretations when there has been removal of significant amounts of skin and tissues. An extreme situation which sometimes arises is the complete evisceration and/or consumption of all major cavity organs. Search of autopsy files at Forensic Science South Australia was undertaken for examples of this phenomenon.

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Geographic variability in homicide rates following the COVID-19 pandemic.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

September 2021

Adelaide Medical School, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

It has been demonstrated in a number of communities that the rates of serious crimes such as homicides and intimate partner violence have increased as a result of lockdowns due to COVID-19. To ascertain whether this is a universal trend the electronic autopsy files at Forensic Science South Australia, Adelaide, Australia, were searched for all homicides occurring between January 2015 and December 2020. There were 92 cases with 17 homicides in 2015 out of a total of 1356 cases (1.

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Ludwig angina and sudden death.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

September 2021

School of Anatomy and Pathology, University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.

A 27-year-old man presented to hospital with neck swelling and difficulty breathing following a recent tooth extraction. He underwent uncomplicated surgical drainage of the submandibular region after which he became acutely short of breath and collapsed and was not able to be resuscitated. At autopsy the major findings were swelling of the neck due to diffuse cellulitis with edema and neutrophil infiltrates within connective tissue and marked submucosal edema of the epiglottis, glottic inlet and tonsils sufficient to cause airway obstruction.

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The classification of the cause of unexpected infant deaths by both pathologists and researchers may be quite inconsistent. For example, if an infant is found lying face down on soft bedding the death may still be certified as 'sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)', 'accidental suffocation', 'undetermined', 'unclassified sudden infant death (USID)', or 'sudden unexpected death in infancy (SUDI)'. As the San Diego definition of SIDS does not appear to be rigorously or consistently applied, clarifying 'mechanical asphyxia not determined with certainty' may help to more clearly separate SIDS from USID.

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Pitfalls and progress in forensic research.

J Forensic Leg Med

February 2019

School of Medicine, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, SA, 5000, Australia. Electronic address:

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A 54-year-old woman was found deceased with incised wounds of both sides of her neck and both wrists. Postmortem CT scanning revealed air in the heart and in the dural veins in continuity with air in the right jugular vein. Death was due to incised wounds of the wrist and neck with blood loss and air embolism.

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Female autoerotic asphyxial death - features and issues.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

March 2017

School of Medicine, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Level 3 Medical School North Building, Frome Road, Adelaide, 5005, Australia.

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A review of hypothermic deaths was undertaken using cases from the Charité University, Berlin, Germany and Forensic Science South Australia, Australia. There were 16 cases from Berlin (age range 38-96 years; average 68 years; M:F = 13:3) Wischnewski spots were present in all 16 cases (100%), skin discolouration in nine (56%), and acute pancreatitis and muscle haemorrhage in one case each (6%). There were 62 Australian cases (age range 30-89 years; average 67 years; M:F = 13:18).

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Haemophilia represents a group of heritable disorders caused by deficiencies in plasma proteins that are involved in coagulation. The case of a two-year-old boy with an established diagnosis of haemophilia B is reported to demonstrate a rare cause of unexpected death. He had a recent history of epistaxis and was found unexpectedly dead.

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Intra-alveolar hemorrhage and hemosiderin have been cited as possible markers of recent and remote asphyxial events. Little study has been undertaken of the potential significance of intra-alveolar hemosiderin in adults as a potential marker of previous sublethal asphyxial episodes. Ten cases of lethal sexual asphyxia (an entity known to be associated with repetitive sublethal asphyxial episodes) and 20 randomly selected, age- and sex-matched controls had sections of lung stained for hemosiderin.

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The potential significance of occult cardiac rhabdomyomas at autopsy in traumatic death.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

December 2011

Discipline of Anatomy & Pathology, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Level 3 Medical School North Building, Frome Road, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.

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Elevated levels of sodium that may be detected in the analysis of post-mortem fluid samples may arise from a wide variety of organic illnesses and environmental factors that have caused either water depletion or solute gain. When hypernatraemia is suspected at autopsy a careful history is required with particular emphasis on pre-existing medical conditions such as renal or gastrointestinal disease. In addition, detailed information is required on the circumstances of death, including any clinical symptoms and signs that the deceased may have manifested, or medical procedures such as dialysis, colonoscopy or intravenous fluid replacement.

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Sudden adult death.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

December 2009

University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, 21 Divett Place, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.

In the investigation of sudden death in adults, channelopathies, such as long QT syndrome, have risen to the fore in the minds of forensic pathologists in recent years. Examples of these disorders are touched upon in this review as an absence of abnormal findings at postmortem examination is characteristic and the importance of considering the diagnosis lies in the heritable nature of these conditions. Typically, a diagnosis of a possible channelopathy is evoked as an explanation for a 'negative autopsy' in a case of apparent sudden natural death.

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Automobile door entrapment--a different form of vehicle-related crush asphyxia.

J Forensic Leg Med

July 2008

Discipline of Pathology, Level 3 Medical School North Building, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Frome Road, Adelaide 5005, South Australia, Australia.

Crush asphyxia involving motor vehicles usually occurs when a victim is trapped beneath a vehicle that slips from a jack while being worked on, or beneath a car that has rolled over during a crash. Two cases are reported where crush asphyxia resulted from quite different circumstances. Case 1: A 58-year-old woman was found dead trapped between her car door and frame.

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It has been asserted that hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) with cerebral swelling in the absence of marked trauma may be responsible for subural hemorrhage in the young. As this may have considerable implications in determining both the mechanism of death and the degree of force required to cause injury in certain cases of inflicted head injury in infancy, clarification is required. A retrospective study of 82 fetuses, infants, and toddlers with proven HIE and no trauma was undertaken from forensic institutes in Australia, the United Kingdom, Germany, Denmark, and the United States.

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Recovery of human remains after shark attack.

Am J Forensic Med Pathol

September 2006

Department of Pathology, University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, Australia.

Two cases of fatal shark attack are reported where the only tissues recovered were fragments of lung. Case 1: An 18-year-old male who was in the sea behind a boat was observed by friends to be taken by a great white shark (Carcharodon carcharias). The shark dragged him under the water and then, with a second shark, dismembered the body.

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