Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Practice Questions and MCQs
Practice Indian Medical PG questions for Autopsy Report Writing. These multiple choice questions (MCQs) cover important concepts and help you prepare for your exams.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 1: During autopsy of a 65-year-old man who collapsed while eating dinner at home, a foreign body (food bolus) is found obstructing the larynx with no other injuries. The manner of death is:
- A. Intentional harm
- B. Self-inflicted harm
- C. Unintentional injury (Correct Answer)
- D. Death from natural causes
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Unintentional injury***
- The presence of a **food bolus obstructing the respiratory tract** in a person who collapsed while eating, with **no evidence of trauma or suspicious circumstances**, is classified as **accidental/unintentional death**.
- This is the most common manner of death associated with foreign body airway obstruction, particularly in elderly individuals or those with neurological conditions affecting swallowing.
- **Café coronary syndrome** (choking on food mimicking cardiac arrest) is a classic example of accidental asphyxia.
*Intentional harm (Homicide)*
- Homicidal foreign body aspiration would require evidence of:
- **Forced insertion** of the foreign body
- **Other traumatic injuries** (bruising, struggle marks)
- **Suspicious circumstances** at the scene
- The scenario described lacks these features, making homicide unlikely.
*Self-inflicted harm (Suicide)*
- Suicide by foreign body aspiration is **extremely rare** and would require:
- **Evidence of suicidal intent** (suicide note, psychiatric history)
- Deliberate insertion beyond the gag reflex
- Accidental choking while eating does not constitute suicidal behavior.
*Death from natural causes*
- **Natural death** results from disease processes, not external physical agents.
- A foreign body causing mechanical airway obstruction is an **external cause of death**, not a natural disease process.
- Even if the person had a predisposing medical condition, the immediate cause (foreign body obstruction) makes this an unintentional injury, not natural death.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 2: Certain obligations on the part of a doctor who undertakes a postmortem examination are the following, EXCEPT:
- A. Routinely record all positive findings and important negative ones
- B. He must keep the police informed about the findings (Correct Answer)
- C. The examination should be meticulous and complete
- D. He must preserve viscera and send for toxicology examination in case of poisoning
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***He must keep the police informed about the findings***
- This is **NOT a formal obligation** of the doctor conducting a postmortem examination.
- The doctor's primary duty is to conduct a thorough, objective examination and prepare a **formal postmortem report** that is submitted to the authority who requisitioned the examination (magistrate/police as per CrPC Section 174).
- While findings may eventually reach the police through the official report, there is **no obligation to informally update or keep police informed** during the examination process.
- The doctor's role is that of an **independent expert witness** to the court, not an investigative assistant to the police.
- Maintaining independence and objectivity requires the doctor to document findings formally rather than providing ongoing informal updates to investigating officers.
*Routinely record all positive findings and important negative ones*
- This IS a **fundamental obligation** for any doctor performing a postmortem examination.
- Both positive findings (pathological changes, injuries) and significant negative findings (absence of expected pathology) must be documented to provide a comprehensive and accurate record.
- This meticulous documentation ensures the **integrity, reliability, and legal validity** of the postmortem examination and its conclusions.
*The examination should be meticulous and complete*
- This IS a **professional, ethical, and legal obligation** for any doctor undertaking a postmortem examination.
- A systematic and thorough examination of all body systems is essential to accurately determine the cause of death and identify all relevant findings.
- Incomplete examinations can lead to **missed diagnoses and miscarriage of justice** in medico-legal cases.
*He must preserve viscera and send for toxicology examination in case of poisoning*
- This IS a **crucial obligation** when poisoning is suspected or cannot be ruled out based on the postmortem findings.
- Relevant viscera (liver, kidney, stomach contents) and bodily fluids (blood, urine) must be preserved in appropriate containers for subsequent toxicological analysis.
- This step is **essential to confirm or exclude toxicological involvement** in the death and is a standard protocol in medico-legal postmortem examinations as per established guidelines.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 3: Which document has highest medicolegal significance in suspected medical negligence?
- A. Nurses' records
- B. Operation notes
- C. Anesthesia notes
- D. Progress notes (Correct Answer)
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Progress notes***
- **Progress notes** provide a continuous, chronological record of the patient's condition, examinations, diagnoses, treatments, and responses, making them invaluable for understanding the **evolving clinical picture** and decision-making.
- They often contain the physician's reasoning, differential diagnoses, and plans, which are crucial for assessing whether the standard of care was met in cases of **medical negligence**.
*Nurses' records*
- While important for detailing patient care, vital signs, medication administration, and observations, nurses' records primarily reflect **nursing interventions** and patient responses rather than complex medical decision-making.
- They may not always contain the in-depth diagnostic reasoning and treatment planning typically documented by physicians, which is central to evaluating a negligence claim.
*Operation notes*
- **Operation notes** provide a detailed account of a surgical procedure, including findings, steps performed, and complications encountered intraoperatively.
- While critical for evaluating surgical performance, they do not offer a comprehensive overview of the patient's entire hospital course, pre-operative assessment, or post-operative management, which are often key areas of contention in negligence cases.
*Anesthesia notes*
- **Anesthesia notes** meticulously document details related to the anesthetic management, such as drugs administered, physiological parameters, and any intraoperative events under the anesthesiologist's care.
- They are highly specific to the anesthetic period and, like operation notes, do not span the entire patient journey or the broader medical decision-making process required to understand overall care quality in a negligence claim.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 4: Virchow method of autopsy includes:-
- A. Organs are removed one by one (Correct Answer)
- B. In situ dissection combined with en bloc removal
- C. Organs are removed en bloc
- D. Organs are removed En masse
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Organs are removed one by one***
- The **Virchow method** of autopsy involves the systematic removal and examination of each organ individually.
- This technique emphasizes the **in-depth inspection** of each organ for pathological changes, one at a time.
*In situ dissection combined with en bloc removal*
- This describes a combination of techniques, not solely the Virchow method. **In situ dissection** involves examining organs within the body cavity.
- Removing organs **en bloc** refers to taking out groups of organs together which is characteristic of other methods like Ghon or Letulle.
*Organs are removed En block*
- The **en bloc method** (e.g., Ghon's method) involves removing entire organ systems or groups of organs together to preserve anatomical relationships.
- This is distinct from the Virchow method, where individual organs are taken out separately.
*Organs are removed En masse*
- The **en masse method** (e.g., Letulle's method) involves removing all organs in a single block, maintaining all anatomical connections.
- This is a more extensive removal technique compared to the Virchow method of individual organ removal.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 5: Medicolegal autopsy requires the permission of
- A. Relative
- B. Medical superintendent
- C. Magistrate
- D. Police (Correct Answer)
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Correct Option: Police***
- A **medicolegal autopsy** is mandated by law under **Section 174 CrPC** in cases of suspicious, unnatural, or sudden deaths.
- The **police** are the **primary authority** empowered to requisition such autopsies, as they are typically the first investigating agency at the scene of unnatural death.
- **No consent from relatives is required** for medicolegal autopsies, as the state has a legal interest in determining the cause of death.
- This is the most common scenario in routine medicolegal practice.
*Incorrect Option: Relative*
- Consent from relatives is required for **clinical/hospital autopsies** (Section 176 IPC), performed for medical education, audit, or research purposes.
- In medicolegal autopsies, the **legal mandate overrides familial consent**, and relatives cannot refuse such an autopsy.
*Incorrect Option: Medical superintendent*
- A **medical superintendent** oversees hospital administration but does **not have legal authority** to order a medicolegal autopsy.
- Their role is limited to facilitating the autopsy within hospital premises once legally sanctioned by competent authority.
*Incorrect Option: Magistrate*
- While an **Executive Magistrate also has legal authority** under Section 174 CrPC to order medicolegal autopsies, this is **less common in routine practice**.
- Police are typically the first responders and primary investigating authority in cases of unnatural death.
- Magistrate involvement is more common in complex cases or when specifically required by legal circumstances.
- In the context of "routine" medicolegal autopsy permission, **police** is the most appropriate answer.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 6: Dying declaration comes under?
- A. Section 60 IEA
- B. 291 CrPC
- C. Section 32 IEA (Correct Answer)
- D. Section 32 IPC
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Section 32 IEA***
- This section of the **Indian Evidence Act (IEA)** specifically deals with cases in which a statement of a relevant fact by a person who is dead or cannot be found, etc., is relevant.
- A **dying declaration** is a statement made by a person as to the cause of their death, or as to any of the circumstances of the transaction which resulted in their death when the cause of that person's death is in question.
*Section 60 IEA*
- This section refers to **oral evidence** and states that oral evidence must, in all cases whatever, be direct.
- It does not specifically address the admissibility of statements made by deceased persons.
*291 CrPC*
- This section relates to the **Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC)** and deals with the evidence of formal character, which can be proved by affidavit.
- It is not concerned with the concept of dying declarations.
*Section 32 IPC*
- This refers to the **Indian Penal Code (IPC)**, which defines various offenses and their punishments.
- Section 32 of the IPC states that words referring to acts include illegal omissions; it does not deal with evidence or dying declarations.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 7: Method of autopsy in which organs of various systems are removed en masse:
- A. Lettulle (Correct Answer)
- B. Virchow
- C. Rokitansky
- D. Ghon
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Lettulle***
- The **Lettulle method** (or en masse method) involves the removal of organs in large blocks or as a single unit, which helps preserve anatomical relationships.
- This technique is particularly useful for studying the **interrelationships between organs** and the spread of disease involving multiple systems.
*Virchow*
- The **Virchow method** involves the individual removal of each organ, which allows for detailed examination of each organ separately.
- This method is straightforward but can disrupt the **anatomical relationships** between organs.
*Rokitansky*
- The **Rokitansky method** involves *in situ* dissection of organs, with the organs remaining largely in the body during dissection.
- This technique is valued for maintaining the **topographical integrity** of organ systems within the body cavity.
*Ghon*
- The **Ghon method** is a modified block dissection method, focusing on the removal of specific organ blocks.
- This often includes the **thoracic and abdominal organs** together, maintaining their anatomical connections.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 8: Incisions for medicolegal autopsy include all except?
- A. 'Y' shaped
- B. Modified 'Y' shaped
- C. Modified 'I' shaped (Correct Answer)
- D. 'T' shaped
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: **Modified 'I' shaped**
- The **modified 'I' shaped** incision is not a standard or recognized incision for a medicolegal autopsy.
- Standard autopsy incisions are designed to provide comprehensive access while maintaining anatomical integrity as much as possible for future viewing or reconstruction.
*'Y' shaped*
- The **'Y' shaped incision** is a commonly used incision in medicolegal autopsies, starting at the shoulders and meeting at the xiphoid process, then extending to the pubic symphysis.
- This incision allows for optimal exposure of the neck, chest, and abdominal organs.
*Modified 'Y' shaped*
- The **modified 'Y' shaped incision** is a variation of the standard 'Y' incision, often used to avoid cutting through prominent scars or to provide better access in specific cases.
- It maintains the general principle of broad exposure while adapting to individual circumstances.
*'T' shaped*
- The **'T' shaped incision** is another recognized incision, though less common than the 'Y' shape, primarily used for better exposure of the neck and chest in certain circumstances.
- It involves a horizontal incision across the upper chest, intersecting with a vertical midline incision.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 9: In autopsy, which organ is removed with liver?
- A. Stomach
- B. Kidney
- C. Spleen (Correct Answer)
- D. Brain
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Spleen***
- In autopsy, the **spleen is routinely removed along with the liver** as part of standard dissection protocols (Virchow's method and variations).
- This is done to examine the **portal venous system**, assess the **hepatosplenic circulation**, and evaluate pathologies affecting both organs such as **portal hypertension**, **congestive splenomegaly**, or **hepatic cirrhosis**.
- The anatomical proximity and shared vascular connections make their removal together both practical and diagnostically valuable.
*Kidney*
- The **kidneys** are typically removed separately or as part of the **posterior abdominal block** after the liver and spleen have been removed.
- While kidneys may be examined in relation to the abdominal vasculature, they are not removed in direct continuity with the liver block in standard autopsy technique.
- Their retroperitoneal location makes separate dissection more appropriate.
*Stomach*
- The **stomach** is removed as part of the **gastrointestinal tract block**, which includes the esophagus, duodenum, and often the pancreas.
- Though anatomically adjacent to the liver, it is not part of the hepatosplenic block.
- Its examination focuses on mucosal pathology, ulcers, tumors, and gastric contents rather than hepatic circulation.
*Brain*
- The **brain** is removed as a completely separate organ through **craniotomy** after reflection of the scalp.
- It is housed within the cranium and has no anatomical or dissection relationship with abdominal organs.
- Brain removal follows examination of the cranial cavity, meninges, and cerebral vessels.
Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG Question 10: For autopsy, vitreous is preserved in:
- A. Phenol
- B. Fluoride (Correct Answer)
- C. Sulphuric acid
- D. Xylol
Autopsy Report Writing Explanation: ***Fluoride (Sodium fluoride)***
- **Sodium fluoride** is the preferred preservative for vitreous humor samples collected during autopsy, especially when testing for **alcohol** and **glucose** levels.
- It acts as an **enzyme inhibitor**, preventing post-mortem metabolism of glucose and fermentation of alcohol by microorganisms, thus maintaining the sample's integrity.
*Phenol*
- **Phenol** is an antiseptic and disinfectant often used in tissue preservation for histological examination, but it is not typically used for vitreous humor to preserve metabolites like glucose or alcohol.
- It can interfere with some analytical methods used for vitreous analysis.
*Sulphuric acid*
- **Sulphuric acid** is a strong acid that would cause significant denaturation of proteins and alteration of the chemical composition of vitreous humor.
- It is not suitable for preserving biological samples for most analyses, especially for fragile metabolites such as glucose.
*Xylol*
- **Xylol** (xylene) is a common solvent used in histology for clearing tissues (removing alcohol) before paraffin embedding, making it unsuitable for direct preservation of body fluids like vitreous humor.
- It would dissolve cellular components and denature proteins, rendering the sample useless for chemical analysis.
More Autopsy Report Writing Indian Medical PG questions available in the OnCourse app. Practice MCQs, flashcards, and get detailed explanations.