Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Traumatic Asphyxia. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 1: What is the term for the death of a person due to compression of the neck by another person?
- A. Hanging
- B. Strangulation
- C. Manual strangulation
- D. Throttling (Correct Answer)
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: ***Throttling***
- **Throttling** is the specific forensic medicine term for manual strangulation by another person, directly applying compressive force to the neck.
- This method of asphyxia involves the use of **hands or fingers** to obstruct airflow and blood supply to the brain.
- It is the **preferred medicolegal term** to denote homicidal manual compression of the neck.
*Hanging*
- **Hanging** involves suspension of the body with a ligature around the neck, causing compression by the body's own weight.
- It is typically a form of **suicidal or accidental death**, rather than homicide through direct manual compression.
*Manual strangulation*
- **Manual strangulation** is synonymous with throttling and also refers to compression of the neck by hands or fingers of another person.
- While medically accurate, **"throttling" is the more specific forensic term** preferred in medicolegal practice.
- This option is incorrect because the question asks for "THE term," and throttling is the standard forensic terminology.
*Strangulation*
- **Strangulation** is a general term for compression of the neck by any means, either manual (throttling) or by a ligature.
- This term is **too broad** as it does not specify the manual method or distinguish between ligature and manual compression.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 2: Which of these is the most life-threatening injury that can be identified by assessing the breathing component of the patient?
- A. Blunt cardiac injury
- B. Tension pneumothorax (Correct Answer)
- C. Cervical spine injury
- D. Laryngotracheal injury
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: ***Tension pneumothorax***
- A tension pneumothorax is a **life-threatening condition** identified during the breathing assessment, as it severely impairs ventilation and causes **hemodynamic instability** by compressing major vessels.
- Key signs include absent breath sounds on the affected side, **tracheal deviation**, and **hypotension** due to mediastinal shift.
*Blunt cardiac injury*
- While serious, blunt cardiac injury is typically identified during the **circulation assessment**, with signs like arrhythmias, hypotension, or cardiac tamponade.
- Its direct impact on breathing is less immediate compared to a tension pneumothorax.
*Cervical spine injury*
- A cervical spine injury can affect breathing if it involves the **phrenic nerve** (C3-C5), leading to respiratory paralysis, but this is assessed during the **disability component** or secondary survey for neurological deficits.
- It does not directly cause an acute, life-threatening compromise of lung function discernible primarily through a breathing assessment like a tension pneumothorax.
*Laryngotracheal injury*
- A laryngotracheal injury primarily affects the **airway component** (A in ABCDE), leading to immediate obstruction or stridor.
- While critical, it is distinct from problems with the lungs' ability to expand or perform gas exchange, which are assessed under breathing.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 3: What is to be addressed first in case of polytrauma -
- A. Circulation
- B. Neurology
- C. Blood Pressure
- D. Airway (Correct Answer)
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: ***Airway***
- Maintaining a **patent airway** is the absolute first priority in polytrauma management according to the **ATLS (Advanced Trauma Life Support)** protocol.
- Failure to secure an airway can lead to **hypoxia** and **brain damage** within minutes, regardless of other injuries.
*Circulation*
- While critical, addressing **circulation** (C in ABCDE) comes after establishing a secure airway and adequate breathing (A and B).
- Uncontrolled hemorrhage would be the focus of circulation management, but only after guaranteeing proper oxygenation.
*Neurology*
- Neurological assessment (D in ABCDE for Disability) follows the primary survey of airway, breathing, and circulation.
- Initial neurological evaluation focuses on **level of consciousness** using the **GCS (Glasgow Coma Scale)**.
*Blood Pressure*
- **Blood pressure** is an indicator of circulatory status but is not the first thing to be addressed.
- It falls under the "C" for circulation in the ATLS protocol, which is secondary to airway and breathing.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 4: A female was found dead in her bedroom. The room was not locked from inside. Her blood alcohol value was found to be 350 mg/dL. The picture taken at the post mortem is shown below. The diagnosis is? (AIIMS Nov 2018, AIIMS Nov 2017)
- A. Traumatic asphyxia
- B. Throttling (Correct Answer)
- C. Café coronary
- D. Bansdola
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: ***Throttling***
- The autopsy image shows extensive **internal hemorrhage** and disruption of neck structures, consistent with significant compressive force applied to the neck by hands, as seen in **throttling**.
- **Throttling** (manual strangulation) causes deep internal injuries including fractured **hyoid bone**, damaged **thyroid cartilage**, and **strap muscle hemorrhage**, even when external marks may be minimal or absent.
- The high blood alcohol level (350 mg/dL - severe intoxication) would have impaired her ability to resist, and the unlocked room suggests **homicidal** intent rather than suicide.
- Key autopsy findings: **deep neck muscle hemorrhage**, **laryngeal fractures**, and **torn blood vessels** without a ligature pattern.
*Traumatic asphyxia*
- Traumatic asphyxia results from severe **chest/thoracic compression** leading to acute venous congestion in the head and neck region.
- Classical signs include **petechial hemorrhages** on face and conjunctivae, **cyanosis** above compression level, and relatively **intact neck structures** on autopsy.
- The severe internal neck damage shown in the autopsy image is **not characteristic** of traumatic asphyxia, which primarily affects superficial vessels due to back-pressure, not deep structural injury.
*Café coronary*
- **Café coronary** is sudden death from **food bolus aspiration** causing airway obstruction, commonly occurring in intoxicated individuals who cannot protect their airway.
- Autopsy findings would show an **obstructing food bolus in the larynx/trachea** without the extensive neck trauma and hemorrhage depicted in the image.
- No manual strangulation injuries would be present.
*Bansdola*
- **Bansdola** is a traditional method of strangulation using a **bamboo stick or rod** twisted across the neck with a rope, used historically as torture or execution.
- It causes a characteristic **linear ligature mark** with underlying soft tissue injury in a horizontal pattern across the neck.
- The autopsy findings in the image show **diffuse manual strangulation injury** rather than the specific linear pattern of ligature strangulation seen in Bansdola.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 5: In typical hanging, knot is placed at:
- A. Chin
- B. Right side of mandible
- C. Occiput (Correct Answer)
- D. Left side of mandible
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: ***Occiput***
- In **typical hanging** (complete suspension of the body), the knot is usually placed at the **occipital region** (nape of the neck/back of the head).
- This positioning results in an **oblique ligature mark** that is higher posteriorly and **typical of suicidal hanging**.
- Death occurs primarily due to **compression of neck vessels** (carotid arteries and jugular veins), leading to **cerebral anoxia**, and **vagal nerve stimulation** causing cardiac arrest.
- The **occiput position** distinguishes typical hanging from atypical variants.
*Chin*
- If the knot is placed at the chin (anterior position), this is **not characteristic of typical hanging**.
- This position would cause primarily **airway compression** but is uncommon in practice.
- Anterior positioning is rarely seen in complete suspension cases.
*Right side of mandible*
- Placing the knot on the **lateral side** of the mandible (right or left) is characteristic of **atypical hanging**.
- This results in an **oblique ligature mark** higher on the side of the knot.
- In atypical hanging, the body may be **partially suspended** or in various positions (sitting, kneeling, lying).
- Death occurs through similar mechanisms but may be slower due to incomplete vascular compression.
*Left side of mandible*
- Similar to placement on the right side, a knot on the left side of the mandible indicates **atypical hanging**.
- The **lateral position** of the knot (either side) is the key distinguishing feature from typical hanging where the knot is posterior.
- Atypical hanging is still fatal through neck vessel compression and vagal stimulation, though the presentation differs from typical cases.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 6: Which of the following conditions is not associated with an increased risk of malignancy?
- A. Down's syndrome
- B. Turner syndrome (Correct Answer)
- C. Noonan syndrome
- D. Klinefelter syndrome
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: **Explanation:**
The question evaluates the association between chromosomal aneuploidies and the risk of malignancy. While many genetic syndromes predispose individuals to cancer due to genomic instability or hormonal imbalances, **Turner Syndrome (45, XO)** is generally **not** associated with an overall increased risk of malignancy compared to the general population. In fact, the risk of breast cancer is significantly lower in Turner patients due to ovarian dysgenesis and low estrogen levels. The only specific risk is a **gonadoblastoma**, which occurs only if there is cryptic Y-chromosome mosaicism (45,X/46,XY).
**Analysis of Options:**
* **Down’s Syndrome (Trisomy 21):** Strongly associated with a 10–20 fold increased risk of **Acute Leukemia** (AMKL/M7 in children <3 years and ALL in older children).
* **Noonan Syndrome:** Often called "Pseudo-Turner," this autosomal dominant condition is associated with an increased risk of **Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia (JMML)** and certain solid tumors like neuroblastoma.
* **Klinefelter Syndrome (47, XXY):** These patients have a significantly higher risk of **Breast Cancer** (20–50 times higher than normal males) and **Extragonadal Germ Cell Tumors** (specifically mediastinal teratomas).
**NEET-PG High-Yield Pearls:**
1. **Turner Syndrome:** Most common cause of primary amenorrhea; characterized by "streak ovaries," webbed neck, and coarctation of the aorta.
2. **Klinefelter Syndrome:** Most common cause of male hypogonadism and infertility; associated with taurodontism.
3. **Cancer Association:** Always remember the "Down-Leukemia" and "Klinefelter-Breast Cancer" links, as these are frequent examiners' favorites.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 7: Death of a person due to compression of the neck by another person is:
- A. Hanging
- B. Asphyxiation due to throttling (Correct Answer)
- C. Strangulation
- D. Asphyxia
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: **Explanation:**
The correct answer is **Asphyxiation due to throttling**. Throttling is a form of manual strangulation where the neck is compressed using the hands, fingers, or other limbs (like the forearm in a "chokehold"). By definition, it is a **homicidal** act because it requires the physical force of another person to compress the airway and neck structures.
**Analysis of Options:**
* **Hanging (A):** This is a form of ligature strangulation where the pressure on the neck is applied by a constricting band tightened by the **gravitational weight of the body** itself. It is most commonly suicidal.
* **Strangulation (C):** While throttling is a subtype of strangulation, "Strangulation" as a general term usually refers to **Ligature Strangulation**, where a cord or wire is used. Throttling is the more specific and accurate term for compression by "another person" using manual force.
* **Asphyxia (D):** This is a broad physiological state (lack of oxygen) rather than a specific mechanism of death. It is the result, not the method.
**High-Yield NEET-PG Pearls:**
* **Bruising Pattern:** In throttling, look for **"Six-penny bruises"** (discoid contusions) caused by fingertips and linear abrasions caused by fingernails.
* **Fractures:** The **Hyoid bone** is more frequently fractured in manual strangulation (throttling) than in hanging, especially the greater cornua.
* **Internal Findings:** Extensive bruising of neck muscles and soft tissues is a hallmark of throttling, whereas hanging often shows minimal internal tissue damage.
* **Manner of Death:** Throttling is **always homicidal**. Hanging is usually suicidal (except for judicial hanging).
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 8: Which of the following is NOT a feature of ligature strangulation?
- A. Horizontal ligature mark
- B. Incomplete ligature mark (Correct Answer)
- C. Marked congested face
- D. Sub-conjunctival hemorrhage
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: **Explanation:**
In forensic medicine, distinguishing between hanging and ligature strangulation is a high-yield competency. The correct answer is **B (Incomplete ligature mark)** because this is a characteristic feature of **hanging**, not strangulation.
1. **Why "Incomplete ligature mark" is the correct answer:** In hanging, the body's weight acts as the force, pulling the ligature upwards toward the point of suspension (knot). This creates a "gap" in the mark, making it **incomplete and oblique**. In contrast, in **ligature strangulation**, the force is applied manually and circumferentially. The ligature is usually tightened around the entire neck, resulting in a **complete, horizontal mark** situated at or below the level of the thyroid cartilage.
2. **Analysis of Incorrect Options:**
* **A. Horizontal ligature mark:** This is a classic feature of strangulation. Unlike hanging (where the mark is oblique), the pressure in strangulation is applied perpendicular to the axis of the neck.
* **C & D. Marked congested face and Sub-conjunctival hemorrhage:** These are prominent in strangulation. Because the pressure is maintained and often exceeds both venous and arterial pressure, there is severe venous congestion and a rise in capillary pressure, leading to a "cyanosed and bloated" appearance with petechial hemorrhages (Tardieu spots). In hanging, these features are often less pronounced due to the rapid cessation of cerebral circulation.
**High-Yield Clinical Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Hyoid Bone Fracture:** More common in strangulation (inward compression) than in hanging (outward traction).
* **Fracture of Thyroid Cartilage:** More common in strangulation.
* **Mode of Death:** Hanging is usually suicidal; Ligature strangulation is almost always **homicidal**.
* **Exception:** A "complete" mark in hanging can occur if a running noose is used.
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 9: The Spanish windlass, a method historically used for execution, is a type of what?
- A. Bansdola
- B. Mugging
- C. Garrotting (Correct Answer)
- D. Hanging
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: **Explanation:**
The **Spanish windlass** is a specific historical technique of **Garrotting** (Option C). In this method, a cord or iron collar is placed around the victim's neck and tightened by twisting a stick or a handle (the windlass mechanism) placed at the back. This causes rapid constriction of the neck, leading to death via asphyxia and obstruction of cerebral blood flow.
**Analysis of Options:**
* **Garrotting (Correct):** It is a form of strangulation where a ligature is tightened around the neck by a twisting mechanical force or a lever. While historically an execution method, modern "garrotting" often refers to sudden attacks from behind using a wire or cord.
* **Bansdola (Incorrect):** This is a form of strangulation unique to India where the neck is compressed between two strong wooden sticks (usually bamboo), which are tied together at both ends.
* **Mugging (Incorrect):** This refers to strangulation caused by compressing the victim's neck within the crook of the elbow or forearm (stranglehold). It is a form of manual/ligature-free strangulation.
* **Hanging (Incorrect):** This is a form of asphyxial death caused by suspension of the body by a ligature, where the constricting force is the body's own weight.
**High-Yield Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Post-mortem findings:** In garrotting, the ligature mark is usually **horizontal**, continuous, and situated below the thyroid cartilage (unlike hanging, which is typically oblique and non-continuous).
* **Fractures:** Fractures of the hyoid bone and thyroid cartilage are more common in garrotting and manual strangulation than in hanging.
* **Burking:** A combination of traumatic asphyxia (chest compression) and smothering (closing nose/mouth).
Traumatic Asphyxia Indian Medical PG Question 10: Oedema aquosum occurs in:
- A. Wet drowning (Correct Answer)
- B. Dry drowning
- C. Secondary drowning
- D. Immersion syndrome
Traumatic Asphyxia Explanation: **Explanation:**
**Oedema aquosum** is a classic autopsy finding specifically associated with **Wet Drowning** (Freshwater or Saltwater drowning). It refers to a state where the lungs are heavy, bulky, and waterlogged.
1. **Why Wet Drowning is Correct:** In wet drowning, the victim actively inhales water into the lungs. This fluid mixes with air and surfactant, creating a fine, tenacious froth. The lungs become massively distended, losing their elasticity, and do not collapse when the chest cavity is opened (emphysema aquosum). When the lungs are indented with a finger, the impression remains (pitting edema), and upon sectioning, a large amount of blood-stained fluid escapes. This specific pathological state is termed *Oedema aquosum*.
2. **Why other options are incorrect:**
* **Dry Drowning:** Death occurs due to immediate laryngeal spasm upon water hitting the glottis. Since no water enters the lungs, *Oedema aquosum* does not occur.
* **Secondary Drowning (Near Drowning):** Death occurs hours to days after the initial immersion due to complications like ARDS or pneumonia, rather than the acute mechanical filling of lungs with water.
* **Immersion Syndrome (Vagal Inhibition):** Death is instantaneous due to cardiac arrest triggered by cold water hitting the pharynx or larynx. The lungs appear normal at autopsy.
**High-Yield Pearls for NEET-PG:**
* **Emphysema Aquosum:** Refers to the hyper-inflated, "ballooned" appearance of the lungs in wet drowning.
* **Paltauf’s Hemorrhages:** Subpleural ecchymoses (shining, pale-red patches) found in the lungs of drowning victims due to alveolar rupture.
* **Froth:** Fine, white, leathery, and persistent froth at the mouth/nose is a pathognomonic sign of ante-mortem drowning.
* **Diatom Test:** The most reliable laboratory tool for diagnosing ante-mortem drowning (specifically looking for diatoms in the bone marrow).
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