Postmortem Changes

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Algor Mortis - Death's Cold Kiss

  • Postmortem body cooling.
  • Mechanism: While Newton's Law of Cooling provides basic understanding, modern forensic practice utilizes sophisticated computational models and AI/machine learning for accurate PMI estimation.
  • Rate of fall: 0.83°C/hr (first 12 hrs) and 0.55°C/hr (after 12 hrs) are overly simplistic - actual rates highly variable requiring complex algorithms.
  • Factors: Ambient temp, clothing, body fat, surface area, humidity, air movement.
  • Modern approach: Multi-modal PMI estimation combining algor mortis with rigor mortis, livor mortis, entomological evidence, and vitreous humor analysis.

⭐ Postmortem caloricity, an initial rise or slower fall in body temperature, can occur in cases like septicemia, poisoning (e.g., strychnine, dinitrophenol), or pontine hemorrhage.

Livor Mortis - Postmortem Bruising Blues

  • Aka: Hypostasis, postmortem lividity. Gravitational settling of blood in dependent areas.
  • Timeline:
    • Appears: <1 hr
    • Well-developed: 6-12 hrs
    • Fixed (no blanching): 6-12 hrs
  • Distribution: Dependent parts; absent at pressure points.
  • Tardieu Spots: Petechiae in livor areas (e.g., asphyxia).
  • Color & Cause:
    ColorCause
    Cherry-redCO, Cyanide (classic)
    PinkHypothermia (classic)
    Deep Blue/PurpleNormal
    BronzeClostridium perfringens
  • Significance: Time since death (TSD), body position, movement post-mortem.

⭐ Fixation of livor mortis after 6-12 hours indicates the body has not been moved significantly since that time; internal livor mortis can also occur in organs. Color interpretation requires correlation with other autopsy findings and circumstances.

Rigor Mortis - Stiff as a Board

  • Definition: Postmortem muscle stiffening.
  • Biochemical Basis: ↓ATP → irreversible actin-myosin complex formation.
  • Development Pattern: Rigor mortis develops in all muscles simultaneously, but is first evident in smaller muscle groups like the jaw, then upper extremities, and finally lower extremities.
  • Timeline:
    • Highly variable and influenced by numerous factors.
    • General ranges often given, but emphasis on variability is crucial.
    • Precise hourly estimations are unreliable for forensic purposes.
  • 📌 Clinical Note: Timeline variability makes rigor mortis assessment challenging in BNS homicide investigations.
  • Factors Affecting Onset & Duration:
    • ↑Temperature, ↑pre-mortem muscular activity → faster onset, shorter duration.
    • ↓Temperature, ↓pre-mortem muscular activity → slower onset, longer duration.
  • Conditions Simulating/Modifying Rigor:
    • Cadaveric spasm (uncommon, disputed phenomenon).
    • Heat stiffness.
    • Cold stiffness.

⭐ Cadaveric spasm is an uncommon and disputed form of rigor that develops immediately upon death, usually after strenuous activity. It is not an 'instantaneous form of rigor' in the same biochemical sense as true rigor mortis, but rather a persistent muscular contraction fixing the body in position at death.

Ocular & Chemical Clues - Eyes & Vits Tell All

  • Eye Changes:
    • Corneal opacity: Variable onset (environmental factors dependent).
    • Tache Noire: Minutes to hours (exposure dependent).
    • ↓ Intraocular tension (rapid decrease, variable timing).
    • Retinal vessel segmentation ('cattle trucking').
  • Biochemical Markers (TSD):
    • Vitreous K+: ↑ linearly, useful up to ~100 hrs.
      • $TSD (hours) = (slope \times [K+]) + intercept$ (estimation with confidence intervals).
    • CSF changes.
  • Stomach Contents: Broad timeframe indicator (highly variable).

⭐ Vitreous K+ is a most reliable biochemical TSD marker (up to 96-120 hrs), less affected by environment.

Decomposition - Earth's Grand Reclaim

  • Putrefaction: Breakdown by autolysis (self-digestion by enzymes) & bacterial action (gas production, tissue breakdown).
    • Signs:
      • Greenish discoloration (abdomen, typically caecum): 24-36 hrs
      • Marbling (vascular pattern due to blood breakdown): 36-48 hrs
      • Gas formation (bloating, crepitus): 48-72 hrs
      • Skin slippage (epidermolysis), purging (fluid from orifices)
    • Factors: ↑Temperature, ↑moisture accelerate. Environment crucial.
    • 📌 Modern forensic understanding: While Casper's Dictum provides general guidelines, decomposition rates are highly variable and influenced by temperature, humidity, insect activity, clothing, body size, cause of death, and trauma presence.
FeatureAdipocere (Saponification)Mummification
ConditionsMoist, anaerobic (e.g., wet soil, water)Dry, hot, good air circulation
ProcessHydrolysis & hydrogenation of body fatsDehydration, desiccation of tissues
AppearanceWaxy, crumbly, firm, whitish/greyishDry, leathery, shrunken, brown/black
Time~3 weeks to monthsMonths to years

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Algor Mortis: Body cooling at ~1-1.5°C/hr initially.
  • Livor Mortis: Starts 30 min-2 hrs, fixes 8-12 hrs; blanching indicates non-fixation.
  • Rigor Mortis: Follows Nysten's Law; starts 1-2 hrs, peaks 12 hrs, lasts 24-36 hrs.
  • Cadaveric Spasm: Instantaneous rigor, indicates last activity.
  • Putrefaction: First sign is greenish discoloration in right iliac fossa (24-36 hrs).
  • Adipocere: Forms in moist, anaerobic environments.
  • Mummification: Occurs in hot, dry conditions.

Practice Questions: Postmortem Changes

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First sign of putrefaction in a dead body:

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If a cadaver is recovered in a state of putrefaction and is infested with maggots, time since death can be assessed to be _____ days.

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If a cadaver is recovered in a state of putrefaction and is infested with maggots, time since death can be assessed to be _____ days.

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