557 results match your criteria: "Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine.[Affiliation]"

Background: Driving under the influence of alcohol and other drugs contributes significantly to road traffic crashes worldwide. This study explored trends of alcohol, methylamphetamine (MA), 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine (MDMA) and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), in road crashes from 2010 to 2019 in Victoria, Australia.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using data from the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine and Victoria Police, examining proscribed drug detections in road crashes.

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Introduction: Nitazenes are a group of potent synthetic opioids that have had increasing prominence as novel psychoactive drugs in the last 5 years. We describe emergency department nitazene-related presentations.

Methods: This is a prospective series of patients with analytically confirmed nitazene presentations identified by the Emerging Drugs Network of Australia and Emerging Drugs Network of Australia Victoria.

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Jurors rely on evidence presented in court to find the facts of a case. Consequently, the manner in which evidence is delivered may significantly impact the extent to which jurors comprehend and interpret the evidence. Building on a pilot study, the aim of this research was to further investigate which format for presenting forensic medical evidence in court was best for laypersons (i.

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The utility of postmortem radiological imaging in forensic neuropathology practice.

Pathology

November 2024

Forensic Pathology Services, Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Melbourne, Vic, Australia; Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, Vic, Australia. Electronic address:

The integration of postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) into forensic pathology practice has been the discipline's most important advance over the past 25 years. Likewise, postmortem radiological imaging has enhanced forensic neuropathology practice. The strengths and weaknesses of PMCT as applied to forensic neuropathology practice will be discussed.

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Analysing the impact of legal and procedural frameworks on the socio-cultural and political dynamics of extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances.

Forensic Sci Int

January 2025

Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, 65 Kavanagh Street, Southbank, Victoria 3006, Australia. Electronic address:

The remains of unlawfully killed individuals can provide evidence concerning human rights violations. The intricate challenges of extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances can complicate legal and procedural processes. These cases often present indicators of suspicious circumstances, necessitating specialised investigative approaches to ascertain the circumstance and cause of death as well as potential human rights violations.

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Investigating skeletal fracture patterns in truck occupants involved in fatal motor vehicle incidents.

Int J Legal Med

November 2024

Department of Forensic Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, 65 Kavanagh Street, Southbank, VIC, 3006, Australia.

Globally, thousands of truck occupants die annually from motor vehicle incidents. During medico-legal investigations of such incidents, forensic practitioners are required to undertake thorough examinations of the injuries present. Despite this, very few studies assessing skeletal fractures in particular, in deceased truck occupants are currently available in the literature for practitioners.

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Forensic science: Where to from Here?

Forensic Sci Int

January 2025

Centre for Forensic Science, University of Technology Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

'Where to from Here' (WTFH) was the theme chosen for the 2023 meeting of the International Association of Forensic Sciences (IAFS). This theme reflects the fact that forensic science is evolving rapidly, not only within individual sub-disciplines but, critically, across the whole forensic science landscape. Identifying and predicting evolutionary change will enable a more focused and constructive future for forensic science.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to explore how variations in the unregulated drug market affect the risk of heroin overdose among individuals with differing personal overdose risk levels.
  • Conducted over a year at the Medically Supervised Injecting Room in Melbourne, the research analyzed 1,474 overdose cases involving 337 participants, mostly male, with an average age of 43.5 years.
  • Findings revealed that the overdose rate was significantly higher on days with high overdose risk, suggesting a 10-fold difference in daily overdose risk linked to market variations.
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Hyoid fracture: consensual sex-play or non-consensual nonfatal strangulation: a case report.

Int J Legal Med

October 2024

Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, Southbank, Victoria, Australia.

Hyoid fractures are uncommon, but when they occur they are commonly the result of strangulation or hanging. Although there is a lack of available quantitative data, there is increasing evidence to suggest that strangulation is a relatively common feature of consensual sex play. This creates difficulty in clinical forensic medicine given the "rough sex" defence has previously been used successfully in cases of fatal intimate partner strangulation.

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Background: To evaluate, in a cohort study, whether coronary microvasculature and myocardial structure differ between people with and without coronary artery disease (CAD).

Methods And Results: We performed histological analysis of left ventricle free wall obtained at autopsy from 25 men and 23 women with ≥1 coronary artery with ≥75% area stenosis, and 25 men and 25 women without (no or minimal) CAD, matched for sex and age, who died suddenly from noncardiac causes. Decedents with myocardial infarction or other cardiac abnormality were excluded.

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A preliminary study on detecting human DNA in aquatic environments: Potential of eDNA in forensics.

Forensic Sci Int Genet

January 2025

School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Locked Bag 20000, Geelong 3220, Australia; Office of the Chief Forensic Scientist, Victoria Police Forensic Services Department, Macleod 3085, Australia.

Article Synopsis
  • Human environmental DNA (eDNA) shows promise as a forensic tool for detecting human DNA in aquatic environments but hasn't been thoroughly utilized yet.
  • A preliminary study tested the persistence and detection of human eDNA using water samples from both freshwater and saltwater, with results indicating varying degrees of detectability over time.
  • The findings suggest that incorporating human eDNA analysis could significantly aid law enforcement in improving investigation accuracy, especially in cases linked to aquatic settings, but further research is essential for optimization.
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A broad-spectrum LC-MS/MS method for screening and quantification of 100 analytes in clinical and autopsy blood samples.

J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci

October 2024

Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, Faculty of Medicine, School of Health Sciences, University of Ioannina, University Campus, Ioannina 45500, Greece; University Hospital of Ioannina, Ioannina 45110, Greece. Electronic address:

Liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (LC-MS) has been tremendously used for screening purposes in forensic toxicology, because of their great adaptability and reasonable time/resource consumption. Herein, a fully validated method based on liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) in human whole blood, by a multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) analysis through LC-MS/MS, is described. The proposed method simultaneously detects 100 analytes (plus three deuterated internal standard compounds) belonging to many different classes, including drugs of abuse, prescription and over-the-counter drugs commonly involved in poisoning and medical malpractice cases in our territory, as well as certain new psychoactive substances (NPS) and toxic substances potentially associated with adverse effects.

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Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) represents a major cause of premature mortality globally, with enormous impact and financial cost to victims, families, and communities. SCA prevention should be considered a health priority in Australia. National Cardiac Arrest Summits were held in June 2022 and March 2023, with inclusion from multi-faceted endeavours related to SCA prevention.

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Detailed review of mortality reported following COVID-19 vaccination in Victoria, Australia: 2021-2023.

Vaccine

December 2024

Surveillance of Adverse Events Following Vaccination In the Community (SAEFVIC), Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of General Medicine, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Introduction: The scale of the COVID-19 vaccine program, and appropriate focus on older individuals, emphasised monitoring of mortality as an important part of COVID-19 vaccine safety surveillance, noting many deaths temporally associated with vaccination may not be causally related. This cross-sectional study describes Victoria's vaccine safety service (SAEFVIC) process of reviewing mortality reports following COVID-19 vaccination, summarises report characteristics and identifies trends in mortality reporting.

Methods: Mortality cases reported to SAEFVIC following COVID-19 vaccination from 22 February 2021 to 22 February 2023 were included.

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Article Synopsis
  • The paper discusses the challenges of identifying human remains found at Sandy Point, Victoria, where both circumstantial information and preservation were lacking, complicating the identification process.
  • Traditional methods like visual or fingerprint identification were impossible due to the state of the remains, leading to the use of a range of techniques including radiocarbon dating and genetic analysis.
  • Ultimately, an interdisciplinary approach combining forensic anthropology, odontology, history, and genealogy successfully identified the remains as belonging to Christopher Luke Moore, who drowned in 1928.
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The accumulation of myofibroblasts within the intimal layer of inflamed blood vessels is a potentially catastrophic complication of vasculitis, which can lead to arterial stenosis and ischaemia. In this study, we have investigated how these luminal myofibroblasts develop during Kawasaki disease (KD), a paediatric vasculitis typically involving the coronary arteries. By performing lineage tracing studies in a murine model of KD, we reveal that luminal myofibroblasts develop independently of adventitial fibroblasts and endothelial cells, and instead derive from smooth muscle cells (SMCs).

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It's all relative: A multi-generational study using ForenSeq™ Kintelligence.

Forensic Sci Int

November 2024

Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, Victoria, Australia; Department of Forensic Medicine,  Monash University, Victoria, Australia. Electronic address:

The successful application of Forensic Investigative Genetic Genealogy (FIGG) to the identification of unidentified human remains and perpetrators of serious crime has led to a growing interest in its use internationally, including Australia. Routinely, FIGG has relied on the generation of high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) profiles from forensic samples using whole genome array (WGA) (∼650,000 or more SNPs) or whole genome sequencing (WGS) (millions of SNPs) for DNA segment-based comparisons in commercially available genealogy databases. To date, this approach has required DNA of a quality and quantity that is often not compatible with forensic samples.

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Novel benzodiazepine (NBz) detections in Victorian coronial cases started early in 2018 and have continued to increase in number and type up to December 2022. The 11 different NBz detections included etizolam (n = 82), flualprazolam (n = 43), clonazolam or 8-aminoclonazolam (n = 30), bromazolam (n = 15), clobromazolam (n = 13), phenazepam (n = 13), flubromazolam (n = 12), flubromazepam (n = 8), desalkylflurazepam (n = 6), diclazepam (n = 2), and estazolam (n = 1). The pattern of detections varied over the 5-year period, with different compounds appearing over different time frames.

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Article Synopsis
  • Harm reduction strategies at music festivals aim to improve safety by monitoring drug-related toxicity through the EDNAV project, which gathers drug intelligence from patients at hospitals.
  • Blood samples from festival attendees with severe drug-related issues were analyzed for over 700 substances during the 2022/2023 festival season.
  • The study found 228 cases of drug-related toxicity among 1603 medical encounters, with common drugs detected being MDMA, ketamine, and cocaine, alongside several unreported substances, indicating emerging drug use patterns.
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Advancing research on femicide prevention: A mixed methods approach.

Med Sci Law

August 2024

Department of Forensic Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Australia.

Femicide, the killing of women, girls, and infants, is a pervasive problem affecting all global societies. Policy and research are impeded by inaccurate and missing prevalence data, gaps in understanding of femicide, especially for hard-to-reach marginalized populations, and conflicting perceptions between jurisdictions. Leveraging on a combined socio-ecologic model and Public Health approach, the paper spans the methods of a computed tomography-based injury study, an in-depth media-analysis, a legislation evaluation study, and a data barriers' study.

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Article Synopsis
  • Protonitazene is a type of opioid linked to cases of toxicity where it was found alongside a THC vape product, suggesting potential dangers in combining these substances.
  • One case involved a young man who needed emergency ventilation after vaping, while another case resulted in death, highlighting the serious risks associated with protonitazene use.
  • The study indicates that even though vaping seems less harmful than using opioids intravenously, it can still lead to high absorption levels and severe toxicity.
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Tension hydrothorax complicating syringopleural shunt for post-traumatic syringomyelia.

Forensic Sci Med Pathol

July 2024

Forensic Pathology, Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, 65 Kavanagh Street, Southbank, Melbourne, 3006, Australia.

Syringomyelia is a rare phenomenon that is typically associated with Chiari malformations. However, they can occur in the setting of post-traumatic spinal injury. Potential diversion treatments include syringopleural (SPS), syringoperitoneal and syringosubarachnoid shunts.

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External contamination is a well-recognized limitation of hair analysis for drugs of abuse like methylamphetamine (MA), and there are no guidelines regarding the analysis of specific metabolites of MA to assist interpretation. We developed an analytical method to detect MA, amphetamine (AMP), and para-hydroxy-methylamphetamine (p-OH-MA) in hair and present their concentrations among a cohort of deceased persons positive for MA in blood (n = 63). Hair samples (≤ 3 cm) were washed with dichloromethane and water prior to extraction using a methanolic micro-pulverization.

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An atypical case of fatal 'esophageal apoplexy': post-mortem findings and differential diagnosis.

Int J Legal Med

November 2024

Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine / Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, 65 Kavanagh Street, Southbank, VIC, 3006, Australia.

Forensic pathologists need to have comprehensive knowledge of a large variety of causes of sudden natural death. We describe a case of sudden and unexpected death in woman in her sixties due to rupture of a large paraesophageal hematoma. The post-mortem examination and differential diagnosis are discussed.

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