Limitations of Autopsy - Setting Expectations
- Autopsy provides crucial data, but has inherent constraints.
- Time Since Death (PMI):
- ↑ PMI complicates interpretation (e.g., injury timing).
- Decomposition:
- While still challenging, modern post-mortem imaging (CT, MRI) and molecular techniques help mitigate impact on findings.
- Lack of History:
- Modern forensic practice emphasizes thorough scene investigation and integration of all available medical records for comprehensive context.
- Subtle Findings:
- Advanced ancillary testing (immunohistochemistry, molecular diagnostics) and specialized expertise improve detection of microscopic processes.
- Toxicology:
- Significant advancements in LC-MS/MS, GC-MS techniques have enhanced detection of rapidly metabolized substances.
- Pre-existing Disease:
- May mask or mimic unnatural causes.
- Artifacts:
- Post-mortem changes or iatrogenic effects, not true pathology.
⭐ A negative autopsy does not exclude an unnatural cause of death.
Decomposition Artifacts - Decomposition's Deceit
Postmortem decomposition artifacts can mimic antemortem injuries; differentiation is key for BNS homicide investigations.
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Early Changes (Hours):
- Algor Mortis: Body cooling. Rate: ~$1.5^\circ F/hr$ initially.
- Livor Mortis (Postmortem Lividity): Purplish-blue stain. Begins 20-30 minutes, confluent within 30 minutes-3 hrs, fully developed 4-8 hrs, maximum intensity 10 hrs. Fixation occurs 4-12 hrs. Initially blanches. Differentiate from bruises (no swelling).
- Rigor Mortis: Muscle stiffening. Nysten's Law. Starts 1-2 hrs (face), peaks 12 hrs, lasts 24-36 hrs.
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Late Changes (Days to Months):
- Putrefaction: Bacterial decay.
- Color: Greenish (RLQ, 18-24 hrs), spreads.
- Marbling: Vascular pattern (24-36 hrs).
⭐ Marbling results from hydrogen sulphide reacting with hemoglobin, forming sulphaemoglobin in superficial veins.
- Gases & Bloating: Crepitus. Distinguish from gas gangrene.
- Skin Slippage/Blisters: Epidermal detachment (2-3 days). Mimics burns.
- Purging: Frothy fluid from orifices (3-5 days). Mimics hemorrhage.
- Adipocere (Saponification): Waxy change in moist, anaerobic sites (weeks-months).
- Mummification: Dessication in dry, hot environments (months-years).
- Putrefaction: Bacterial decay.
Other Artifacts - Induced Illusions
- Iatrogenic Artifacts (Medically Induced):
Type Key Features Resuscitation Ant/Anterolat rib #, sternal #; often bilateral; minimal/no vital reaction Embalming Trocar marks; altered tissue color/consistency; chemical artifacts (e.g., HCHO) Autopsy Clean incisions; tool marks; post-mortem fractures (e.g., skull removal) ⭐ Rib fractures from CPR are typically anterior or anterolateral, often multiple, and may lack significant surrounding hemorrhage if circulation was poor.
- Agonal Artifacts:
- Agonal thrombi: Loose, layered (chicken fat/red currant jelly).
- Agonal stress ulcers in stomach (acute gastric erosions).
- Animal/Insect Activity:
- Post-mortem predation (e.g., rodents, canids; scalloped wound edges).
- Insect activity (e.g., fly larvae, ants) creating defects.

- Environmental Artifacts:
- Heat: Pugilistic attitude, heat hematoma (epidural), skin splitting.
- Water (Immersion): Skin wrinkling and gooseflesh (cutis anserina), adipocere, maceration.
- Freezing: Ice crystal artifacts, skin splitting.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Decomposition severely limits interpretation, obscuring injuries and toxicology.
- Embalming artifacts like trocar marks can mimic injuries or alter tissues.
- Resuscitation efforts often cause iatrogenic injuries (e.g., rib/sternal fractures).
- Postmortem lividity (hypostasis) differs from bruises by blanching on pressure.
- Tardieu spots indicate severe visceral congestion, not necessarily direct trauma.
- Putrefaction bullae can be confused with antemortem thermal or chemical burns.
- Mummification and adipocere drastically alter postmortem appearance and preservation.
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