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1.
Leg Med (Tokyo) ; 69: 102339, 2023 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37872072

ABSTRACT

Choking is a type of asphyxia due to the internal obstruction of airways by foreign material, quite always food. Most choking deaths are accidental and occur so quickly that may mimic a heart attack. This scenario is also known as "Cafè coronary syndrome" or "bolus death". At autopsy, pieces of under-chewed food are commonly lodged at, above, or in the tracheal space adjacent to the laryngeal inlet. In these fatal events mechanisms other than asphyxia can be also involved, such as a vasovagal episode (by stimulation of the autonomic nerve plexus of the laryngeal inlet) or swallowing impairment. Swallowing is a complex, semi-automatic process that can be affected by various disorders (i.e. dementia, Parkinson, neurological injuries, etc.), senility and external factors causing oropharyngeal dysphagia (OD). Among these factors, several drugs have been also associated with impaired swallowing, including drugs acting on the CNS like antipsychotics and antiepileptics. Three cases of witnessed bolus deaths are reported. All victims were affected by neurological defects and took medications acting on CNS. In all cases, at autopsy pieces of food were found distributed from the laryngeal inlet along the main axis of the trachea up to the large bronchi over the bifurcation. Additional autopsy findings were represented by facial congestion and cyanosis, subepicardial petechiae and pulmonary emphysema.

2.
Forensic Sci Int ; 298: 307-311, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30925349

ABSTRACT

Traumatic diastasis of cranial sutures is a type of bone fracture more common in children than in adults, but little attention has been paid to this skull damage. Differentiation between inflicted and accidental traumatic head injury is still a challenge in forensic pathology, particularly in pediatric population. In fact, diastasis of cranial sutures may occur with or without other skull fractures and may be the only evidence of an abusive head trauma (AHT). This is a case study dealing with undetected traumatic diastasis of cranial sutures in child abuse. The skeletonized juvenile remains were found inside a suitcase. A diastasis of the coronal and sagittal sutures was the only finding recorded at the autopsy with no other relevant bone defects. The diastasis was originally attributed by the medical examiner to a physiological unfused stage of the calvarial bones. Therefore, the cause of death was undetermined. Twelve years later an anthropological revision of the cold case showed that diastasis of the coronal and sagittal sutures was assessed as the evidence of an AHT. Analysis of skull fractures in child abuse can be challenging as normal skull suture variants mimicking intentional injury are reported. Diastasis of the cranial sutures can be also a post-mortem effect of burning or freezing. Therefore, a differential diagnosis between natural, accidental or inflicted skull defects is mandatory in death investigation. A multidisciplinary approach in such circumstances is strongly recommended in order to reduce the risk of misdiagnosis.


Subject(s)
Cranial Sutures/injuries , Craniocerebral Trauma/complications , Diastasis, Bone/pathology , Homicide , Skull Fractures/pathology , Child , Child Abuse , Cranial Sutures/pathology , Craniocerebral Trauma/diagnosis , Diastasis, Bone/etiology , Humans , Male , Skull Fractures/etiology
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