Asphyxial Deaths

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Asphyxia Basics - Breathless Beginnings

Asphyxia: Deficient oxygen (hypoxia, ↓ $O_2$) and excess carbon dioxide (hypercapnia, ↑ $CO_2$) in blood/tissues from impaired respiration.

Key types; mechanical forms are forensically most significant:

General Signs (Classic Triad):

  • Cyanosis: Bluish/purplish skin & mucous membranes.
  • Petechiae (Tardieu spots): Pinpoint hemorrhages (e.g., conjunctiva, eyelids, face, epicardium).
  • Congestion & Edema: Organs (lungs, brain) engorged with blood, often swollen.

⭐ The classic triad (cyanosis, petechiae, visceral congestion) is highly suggestive but non-specific; can be seen in other rapid deaths.

Hanging - Neck's Noose News

  • Types: Complete/Incomplete (suspension); Typical/Atypical (knot).
  • Mechanism: Cerebral anoxia; Occlusion (J:2kg, C:5kg, T:15kg, V:25kg); Vagal inhibition; C-spine fracture (rare).
  • PM Findings:
    • Ligature: Oblique, non-continuous, ↑ to suspension, above thyroid, parchment, patterned.
    • Saliva (opp. knot); Cyanosis (face, incomplete); Tardieu's spots.
    • Tongue protrusion; Hyoid fracture (less common, inward cornua); Simon's (rare).

⭐ Ligature mark in hanging is typically oblique, non-continuous, and situated high up in the neck, above the thyroid cartilage, with a parchment-like, abraded base.

Strangulation - Squeeze Story

  • Ligature Strangulation:
    • Mark: Horizontal/transverse, continuous, usually at/below thyroid cartilage.
    • Base: Soft (unless abrasive ligature). Signs of struggle often present.
    • More internal neck injuries than hanging.
  • Manual Strangulation (Throttling):
    • External: Bruises, abrasions (fingernail marks: crescentic, linear); neck contusions from finger pressure.
    • Internal: Hyoid bone fracture (common, esp. greater cornua, outward displacement); laryngeal cartilage fractures (thyroid, cricoid); internal neck muscle hemorrhage.
  • Bansdola: Strangulation by stepping on a rod over the neck.

⭐ Fracture of the hyoid bone, particularly the greater cornua, is more common in manual strangulation (throttling) than in hanging, and often shows outward displacement.

Suffocation & Choking - Airway Attack

  • Smothering: External airway obstruction (e.g., pillow, plastic bag); findings often minimal.

  • Gagging: Internal airway (pharynx) obstruction by cloth/material.

  • Choking: Internal laryngeal/tracheal obstruction by foreign body (e.g., food bolus in 'Cafe coronary'); laryngeal spasm.

  • Traumatic Asphyxia (Crush Asphyxia): Chest/abdomen compression preventing respiration (e.g., stampede, building collapse).

    ⭐ 'Masque ecchymotique' (ecchymotic mask) from intense head/neck venous congestion is characteristic.

  • Burking: Smothering combined with traumatic asphyxia.

  • Overlaying: Infant death from adult rolling over.

  • General Findings: Tardieu spots, congestion, cyanosis.

Drowning - Watery Woes

  • Def: Asphyxia by fluid submersion.
  • Types: Wet/Dry (laryngeal spasm); Fresh/Saltwater (electrolytes); Secondary; Immersion syndrome (vagal).
  • External: Persistent froth ('mousse'); cutis anserina; washerwoman's skin; cadaveric spasm (clenched items).
  • Internal: Emphysema aquosum (lungs: voluminous, edematous, rib-indented); Paltauf’s hemorrhages; Diatom test (key).

⭐ The presence of diatoms, matching the species from the putative drowning medium, in distant, closed organs like the femoral bone marrow is considered a strong indicator of antemortem drowning.

  • 📌 FOAM: Froth, Objects clenched, Aquosum (emphysema), Marrow (diatoms). oka

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Petechial hemorrhages (Tardieu spots) in conjunctiva, eyelids, and visceral pleura are crucial.
  • Cyanosis and visceral congestion are common but non-specific general signs.
  • Hanging: Oblique, non-continuous ligature mark typically above the thyroid; saliva dribbling.
  • Strangulation: Horizontal, continuous ligature mark usually below thyroid; hyoid fracture more common.
  • Drowning: Fine, lathery froth at airways; diatoms in tissues; Paltauf's spots (subpleural hemorrhages).
  • Suffocation types: Smothering (external airway obstruction), Choking (internal airway blockage), Traumatic asphyxia (chest compression).
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Practice Questions: Asphyxial Deaths

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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:

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