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Wikipedia

Autopsy

An autopsy (post-mortem examination, obduction, necropsy, or autopsia cadaverum) is a surgical procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a corpse by dissection to determine the cause, mode, and manner of death; or the exam may be performed to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present for research or educational purposes. For animals, the term necropsy is generally reserved.

Autopsy
The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp, (1632) by Rembrandt, depicts an autopsy.
ICD-9-CM89.8
MeSHD001344
[edit on Wikidata]

Autopsies are usually performed by a specialized medical doctor called a pathologist. Only a small portion of deaths require an autopsy to be performed, under certain circumstances. In most cases, a medical examiner or coroner can determine the cause of death.

Purposes of performance

Autopsies are performed for either legal or medical purposes. Autopsies can be performed when any of the following information is desired:

For example, a forensic autopsy is carried out when the cause of death may be a criminal matter, while a clinical or academic autopsy is performed to find the medical cause of death and is used in cases of unknown or uncertain death, or for research purposes. Autopsies can be further classified into cases where external examination suffices, and those where the body is dissected and internal examination is conducted. Permission from next of kin may be required for internal autopsy in some cases. Once an internal autopsy is complete, the body is reconstituted by sewing it back together.

Etymology

Autopsy

The term "autopsy" derives from the Ancient Greek αὐτοψία autopsia, "to see for oneself", derived from αὐτός (autos, "oneself") and ὄψις (opsis, "sight, view").[1] The word has been in use since around the 17th century.[2]

Post-mortem

The term "post-mortem" derives from the Latin post, 'after', and mortem, 'death'. It was first recorded in 1734.[3]

Purpose

The principal aims of an autopsy are to determine the cause of death, mode of death, manner of death, the state of health of the person before he or she died, and whether any medical diagnosis and treatment before death were appropriate. In most Western countries the number of autopsies performed in hospitals has been decreasing every year since 1955. Critics, including pathologist and former JAMA editor George D. Lundberg, have charged that the reduction in autopsies is negatively affecting the care delivered in hospitals, because when mistakes result in death, they are often not investigated and lessons, therefore, remain unlearned. When a person has permitted an autopsy in advance of their death, autopsies may also be carried out for the purposes of teaching or medical research. An autopsy is frequently performed in cases of sudden death, where a doctor is not able to write a death certificate, or when death is believed to result from an unnatural cause. These examinations are performed under a legal authority (medical examiner, coroner , or procurator fiscal) and do not require the consent of relatives of the deceased. The most extreme example is the examination of murder victims, especially when medical examiners are looking for signs of death or the murder method, such as bullet wounds and exit points, signs of strangulation, or traces of poison. Some religions including Judaism and Islam usually discourage the performing of autopsies on their adherents.[4] Organizations such as ZAKA in Israel and Misaskim in the United States generally guide families on how to ensure that an unnecessary autopsy is not made. Autopsies are used in clinical medicine to identify a medical error or a previously unnoticed condition that may endanger the living, such as infectious diseases or exposure to hazardous materials.[5] A study that focused on myocardial infarction (heart attack) as a cause of death found significant errors of omission and commission,[6] i.e. a sizable number of cases ascribed to myocardial infarctions (MIs) were not MIs and a significant number of non-MIs were MIs.

A systematic review of studies of the autopsy calculated that in about 25% of autopsies, a major diagnostic error will be revealed.[7] However, this rate has decreased over time and the study projects that in a contemporary US institution, 8.4% to 24.4% of autopsies will detect major diagnostic errors.

A large meta-analysis suggested that approximately one-third of death certificates are incorrect and that half of the autopsies performed produced findings that were not suspected before the person died.[8] Also, it is thought that over one-fifth of unexpected findings can only be diagnosed histologically, i.e., by biopsy or autopsy, and that approximately one-quarter of unexpected findings, or 5% of all findings, are major and can similarly only be diagnosed from tissue.

One study found that (out of 694 diagnoses) "Autopsies revealed 171 missed diagnoses, including 21 cancers, 12 strokes, 11 myocardial infarctions, 10 pulmonary emboli, and 9 endocarditis, among others".[9]

Focusing on intubated patients, one study found "abdominal pathologic conditions – abscesses, bowel perforations, or infarction – were as frequent as pulmonary emboli as a cause of class I errors. While patients with abdominal pathologic conditions generally complained of abdominal pain, results of an examination of the abdomen were considered unremarkable in most patients, and the symptom was not pursued".[10]

Types

 
Dissection room at the University of Helsinki in Finland in 1928

There are four main types of autopsy:[11]

  • Medico-legal or forensic or coroner's autopsies seek to find the cause and manner of death and to identify the decedent.[11] They are generally performed, as prescribed by applicable law, in cases of violent, suspicious or sudden deaths, deaths without medical assistance, or during surgical procedures.[11]
  • Clinical or pathological autopsies are performed to diagnose a particular disease or for research purposes. They aim to determine, clarify, or confirm medical diagnoses that remained unknown or unclear before the patient's death.[11]
  • Anatomical or academic autopsies are performed by students of anatomy for study purposes only.
  • Virtual or medical imaging autopsies are performed utilizing imaging technology only, primarily magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT).[12]

Forensic autopsy

 
Autopsy room of the Charité Berlin, Germany, 2010

A forensic autopsy is used to determine the cause, mode, and manner of death.

Forensic science involves the application of the sciences to answer questions of interest to the legal system.

Medical examiners attempt to determine the time of death, the exact cause of death, and what, if anything, preceded the death, such as a struggle. A forensic autopsy may include obtaining biological specimens from the deceased for toxicological testing, including stomach contents. Toxicology tests may reveal the presence of one or more chemical "poisons" (all chemicals, in sufficient quantities, can be classified as a poison) and their quantity. Because post-mortem deterioration of the body, together with the gravitational pooling of bodily fluids, will necessarily alter the bodily environment, toxicology tests may overestimate, rather than underestimate, the quantity of the suspected chemical.[13]

Following an in-depth examination of all the evidence, a medical examiner or coroner will assign a manner of death from the choices proscribed by the fact-finder's jurisdiction and will detail the evidence on the mechanism of the death.

Clinical autopsy

 
Pathologist performing a human dissection of the abdominal and thoracic organs in an autopsy room.

Clinical autopsies serve two major purposes. They are performed to gain more insight into pathological processes and determine what factors contributed to a patient's death. For example, material for infectious disease testing can be collected during an autopsy.[14] Autopsies are also performed to ensure the standard of care at hospitals. Autopsies can yield insight into how patient deaths can be prevented in the future.

Within the United Kingdom, clinical autopsies can be carried out only with the consent of the family of the deceased person, as opposed to a medico-legal autopsy instructed by a Coroner (England & Wales) or Procurator Fiscal (Scotland), to which the family cannot object.[citation needed]

Over time, autopsies have not only been able to determine the cause of death, but also lead to discoveries of various diseases such as fetal alcohol syndrome, Legionnaire's disease, and even viral hepatitis.

Academic autopsy

Academic autopsies are performed by students of anatomy for the purpose of study, giving medical students and residents firsthand experience viewing anatomy and pathology. Postmortem examinations require the skill to connect anatomic and clinical pathology together since they involve organ systems and interruptions from ante mortem and post mortem. These academic autopsies allow for students to practice and develop skills in pathology and become meticulous in later case examinations.[15]

Virtual autopsy

Virtual autopsies are performed using radiographic techniques which can be used in post-mortem examinations for a deceased individual.[16] It is an alternative to medical autopsies, where radiographs are used, for example, Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and Computed tomography (CT scan) which produce radiographic images in order to determine the cause of death, the nature, and the manner of death, without dissecting the deceased. It can also be used in the identification of the deceased.[17] This method is helpful in determining the questions pertaining to an autopsy without putting the examiner at risk of biohazardous materials that can be in an individual's body.

Prevalence

In 2004 in England and Wales, there were 514,000 deaths, of which 225,500 were referred to the coroner. Of those, 115,800 (22.5% of all deaths) resulted in post-mortem examinations and there were 28,300 inquests, 570 with a jury.[18]

The rate of consented (hospital) autopsy in the UK and worldwide has declined rapidly over the past 50 years. In the UK in 2013 only 0.7% of inpatient adult deaths were followed by consented autopsy.[19]

The autopsy rate in Germany is below 5% and thus much lower than in other countries in Europe. The governmental reimbursement is hardly sufficient to cover all the costs, so the medical journal Deutsches Ärzteblatt, issued by the German Medical Association makes the effort to raise awareness regarding the underfinancing of autopsies. The same sources stated that autopsy rates in Sweden and Finland reach 20 to 30%.[20]

In the United States, autopsy rates fell from 17% in 1980 to 14% in 1985[21] and 11.5% in 1989,[22] although the figures vary notably from county to county.[23]

Process

 
Cadaver dissection tables are similar to those used in medical or forensic autopsies.

The body is received at a medical examiner's office, municipal mortuary, or hospital in a body bag or evidence sheet. A new body bag is used for each body to ensure that only evidence from that body is contained within the bag. Evidence sheets are an alternative way to transport the body. An evidence sheet is a sterile sheet that covers the body when it is moved. If it is believed there may be any significant evidence on the hands, for example, gunshot residue or skin under the fingernails, a separate paper sack is put around each hand and taped shut around the wrist.

There are two parts to the physical examination of the body: the external and internal examination. Toxicology, biochemical tests or genetic testing/molecular autopsy often supplement these and frequently assist the pathologist in assigning the cause or causes of death.

External examination

At many institutions, the person responsible for handling, cleaning, and moving the body is called a diener, the German word for servant. In the UK this role is performed by an Anatomical Pathology Technician (APT), who will also assist the pathologist in eviscerating the body and reconstruction after the autopsy. After the body is received, it is first photographed. The examiner then notes the kind of clothes - if any - and their position on the body before they are removed. Next, any evidence such as residue, flakes of paint, or other material is collected from the external surfaces of the body. Ultraviolet light may also be used to search body surfaces for any evidence not easily visible to the naked eye. Samples of hair, nails , and the like are taken, and the body may also be radiographically imaged. Once the external evidence is collected, the body is removed from the bag, undressed, and any wounds present are examined. The body is then cleaned, weighed, and measured in preparation for the internal examination.

A general description of the body as regards ethnic group, sex, age, hair colour and length, eye colour , and other distinguishing features (birthmarks, old scar tissue, moles, tattoos, etc.) is then made. A voice recorder or a standard examination form is normally used to record this information.

In some countries[citation needed], e.g., Scotland, France, Germany, Russia, and Canada, an autopsy may comprise an external examination only. This concept is sometimes termed a "view and grant". The principle behind this is that the medical records, history of the deceased and circumstances of death have all indicated as to the cause and manner of death without the need for an internal examination.[24]

Internal examination

If not already in place, a plastic or rubber brick called a "head block" is placed under the shoulders of the corpse; hyperflexion of the neck makes the spine arch backward while stretching and pushing the chest upward to make it easier to incise. This gives the APT, or pathologist, maximum exposure to the trunk. After this is done, the internal examination begins. The internal examination consists of inspecting the internal organs of the body by dissection for evidence of trauma or other indications of the cause of death. For the internal examination there are a number of different approaches available:

  • a large and deep Y-shaped incision can be made starting at the top of each shoulder and running down the front of the chest, meeting at the lower point of the sternum (breastbone).
  • a curved incision made from the tips of each shoulder, in a semi-circular line across the chest/decolletage, to approximately the level of the second rib, curving back up to the opposite shoulder.
  • a single vertical incision is made from the sternal notch at the base of the neck.
  • a U-shaped incision is made at the tip of both shoulders, down along the side of the chest to the bottom of the rib cage, following along it. This is typically used on women and during chest-only autopsies.

There is no need for any incision to be made, which will be visible after completion of the examination when the deceased is dressed in a shroud. In all of the above cases, the incision then extends all the way down to the pubic bone (making a deviation to either side of the navel) and avoiding, where possible, transecting any scars that may be present.

Bleeding from the cuts is minimal, or non-existent because the pull of gravity is producing the only blood pressure at this point, related directly to the complete lack of cardiac functionality. However, in certain cases, there is anecdotal evidence that bleeding can be quite profuse, especially in cases of drowning.

At this point, shears are used to open the chest cavity. The examiner uses the tool to cut through the ribs on the costal cartilage, to allow the sternum to be removed; this is done so that the heart and lungs can be seen in situ and that the heart – in particular, the pericardial sac – is not damaged or disturbed from opening. A PM 40 knife is used to remove the sternum from the soft tissue that attaches it to the mediastinum. Now the lungs and the heart are exposed. The sternum is set aside and will eventually be replaced at the end of the autopsy.

At this stage, the organs are exposed. Usually, the organs are removed in a systematic fashion. Making a decision as to what order the organs are to be removed will depend highly on the case in question. Organs can be removed in several ways: The first is the en masse technique of Letulle whereby all the organs are removed as one large mass. The second is the en bloc method of Ghon. The most popular in the UK is a modified version of this method, which is divided into four groups of organs. Although these are the two predominant evisceration techniques, in the UK variations on these are widespread.

One method is described here: The pericardial sac is opened to view the heart. Blood for chemical analysis may be removed from the inferior vena cava or the pulmonary veins. Before removing the heart, the pulmonary artery is opened in order to search for a blood clot. The heart can then be removed by cutting the inferior vena cava, the pulmonary veins, the aorta and pulmonary artery, and the superior vena cava. This method leaves the aortic arch intact, which will make things easier for the embalmer. The left lung is then easily accessible and can be removed by cutting the bronchus, artery, and vein at the hilum. The right lung can then be similarly removed. The abdominal organs can be removed one by one after first examining their relationships and vessels.

Most pathologists, however, prefer the organs to be removed all in one "block". Using dissection of the fascia, blunt dissection; using the fingers or hands and traction; the organs are dissected out in one piece for further inspection and sampling. During autopsies of infants, this method is used almost all of the time. The various organs are examined, weighed and tissue samples in the form of slices are taken. Even major blood vessels are cut open and inspected at this stage. Next the stomach and intestinal contents are examined and weighed. This could be useful to find the cause and time of death, due to the natural passage of food through the bowel during digestion. The more area empty, the longer the deceased had gone without a meal before death.

 
A brain autopsy demonstrating signs of meningitis. The forceps (center) are retracting the dura mater (white). Underneath the dura mater are the leptomeninges, which appear to be edematous and have multiple small hemorrhagic foci.
 
Autopsy of a brain after sectioning, showing a normal brain with the cerebrum cut in coronal sections, and the cerebellum, pons and medulla cut in horizontal sections. Standard sections for microscopic examination are annotated.

The body block that was used earlier to elevate the chest cavity is now used to elevate the head. To examine the brain, an incision is made from behind one ear, over the crown of the head, to a point behind the other ear. When the autopsy is completed, the incision can be neatly sewn up and is not noticed when the head is resting on a pillow in an open casket funeral. The scalp is pulled away from the skull in two flaps with the front flap going over the face and the rear flap over the back of the neck. The skull is then cut with a circular (or semicircular) bladed reciprocating saw to create a "cap" that can be pulled off, exposing the brain. The brain is then observed in situ. Then the brain's connection to the cranial nerves and spinal cord are severed, and the brain is lifted out of the skull for further examination. If the brain needs to be preserved before being inspected, it is contained in a large container of formalin (15 percent solution of formaldehyde gas in buffered water) for at least two, but preferably four weeks. This not only preserves the brain, but also makes it firmer, allowing easier handling without corrupting the tissue.

Reconstitution of the body

An important component of the autopsy is the reconstitution of the body such that it can be viewed, if desired, by relatives of the deceased following the procedure. After the examination, the body has an open and empty thoracic cavity with chest flaps open on both sides, the top of the skull is missing, and the skull flaps are pulled over the face and neck. It is unusual to examine the face, arms, hands or legs internally.

In the UK, following the Human Tissue Act 2004 all organs and tissue must be returned to the body unless permission is given by the family to retain any tissue for further investigation. Normally the internal body cavity is lined with cotton, wool, or a similar material, and the organs are then placed into a plastic bag to prevent leakage and are returned to the body cavity. The chest flaps are then closed and sewn back together and the skull cap is sewed back in place. Then the body may be wrapped in a shroud, and it is common for relatives to not be able to tell the procedure has been done when the body is viewed in a funeral parlor after embalming.

In stroke

 
Cavitation at gross pathology of an old stroke in the left posterior parietal lobe.

An autopsy of stroke may be able to establish the time taken from the onset of cerebral infarction to the time of death.

Various microscopic findings are present at times from infarction as follows:[25]

 
Histopathology at high magnification of a normal neuron, and an ischemic stroke at approximately 24 hours on H&E stain: The neurons become hypereosinophilic and there is an infiltrate of neutrophils. There is slight edema and loss of normal architecture in the surrounding neuropil.
Finding Presence
Eosinophilic (red) neurons 1–35 days
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes 1–37 days
Other acute neuronal injuries 1–60 days
Coagulative necrosis 1 day - 5 years
Spongiosis of surrounding tissue 1 day and older
Astrogliosis (gemistocytes) 2 days and older
Neo-vascularization 3 days and older
Hemosiderin pigment 3 days and older
Mononuclear inflammatory cells 3 days–50 years
Macrophages 3 days–50 years
Cavitation 12 days or older

History

 
Dissection, 19th century US.

Around 3000 BCE, ancient Egyptians were one of the first civilizations to practice the removal and examination of the internal organs of humans in the religious practice of mummification.[1][26]

Autopsies that opened the body to determine the cause of death were attested at least in the early third millennium BCE, although they were opposed in many ancient societies where it was believed that the outward disfigurement of dead persons prevented them from entering the afterlife[27] (as with the Egyptians, who removed the organs through tiny slits in the body).[1] Notable Greek autopsists were Erasistratus and Herophilus of Chalcedon, who lived in 3rd century BCE Alexandria, but in general, autopsies were rare in ancient Greece.[27] In 44 BCE, Julius Caesar was the subject of an official autopsy after his murder by rival senators, the physician's report noting that the second stab wound Caesar received was the fatal one.[27] Julius Caesar had been stabbed a total of 23 times.[28] By around 150 BCE, ancient Roman legal practice had established clear parameters for autopsies.[1] The greatest ancient anatomist was Galen (CE 129– c. 216), whose findings would not be challenged until the Renaissance over a thousand years later.[29]

 
Autopsy (1890) by Enrique Simonet.

Ibn Tufail has elaborated on autopsy in his treatise called Hayy ibn Yaqzan and Nadia Maftouni, discussing the subject in an extensive article, believes him to be among the early supporters of autopsy and vivisection.[30]

The dissection of human remains for medical or scientific reasons continued to be practiced irregularly after the Romans, for instance by the Arab physicians Avenzoar and Ibn al-Nafis. In Europe they were done with enough regularity to become skilled, as early as 1200, and successful efforts to preserve the body, by filling the veins with wax and metals.[29] Until the 20th century,[29] it was thought that the modern autopsy process derived from the anatomists of the Renaissance. Giovanni Battista Morgagni (1682–1771), celebrated as the father of anatomical pathology,[31] wrote the first exhaustive work on pathology, De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomen Indagatis (The Seats and Causes of Diseases Investigated by Anatomy, 1769).[1]

In 1543, Andreas Vesalius conducted a public dissection of the body of a former criminal. He asserted and articulated the bones, this became the world's oldest surviving anatomical preparation. It is still displayed at the Anatomical Museum at the University of Basel.[32]

In the mid-1800s, Carl von Rokitansky and colleagues at the Second Vienna Medical School began to undertake dissections as a means to improve diagnostic medicine.[28]

The 19th-century medical researcher Rudolf Virchow, in response to a lack of standardization of autopsy procedures, established and published specific autopsy protocols (one such protocol still bears his name). He also developed the concept of pathological processes.[33]

During the turn of the 20th century, the Scotland Yard created the Office of the Forensic Pathologist, a medical examiner trained in medicine, charged with investigating the cause of all unnatural deaths, including accidents, homicides, suicides, etc.

Other animals (necropsy)

 
A field post-mortem exam of a female sheep (ewe)

A post-mortem examination, or necropsy, is far more common in veterinary medicine than in human medicine. For many species that exhibit few external symptoms (sheep), or that are not suited to detail clinical examination (poultry, cage birds, zoo animals), it is a common method used by veterinary physicians to come to a diagnosis. A necropsy is mostly used like an autopsy to determine the cause of death. The entire body is examined at the gross visual level, and samples are collected for additional analyses.[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Rothenberg, Kelly (2008). "The Autopsy Through History". In Ayn Embar-seddon, Allan D. Pass (ed.). Forensic Science. Salem Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-58765-423-7.
  2. ^ Clark MJ (2005). "Historical Keyword "autopsy"". The Lancet. 366 (9499): 1767. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67715-X. PMID 16298206. S2CID 208790970.
  3. ^ "post-mortem (adj.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  4. ^ Elizabeth C Burton, Kim A Collins. Religions and the Autopsy, EMedicine. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  5. ^ Michael Tsokos, "Die Klaviatur des Todes", Knaur, Munich, 2013, pp. 179–89
  6. ^ Ravakhah K (2006). "Death certificates are not reliable: revivification of the autopsy". Southern Medical Journal. 99 (7): 728–33. doi:10.1097/01.smj.0000224337.77074.57. PMID 16866055. S2CID 27913932.
  7. ^ Shojania KG, Burton EC, McDonald KM, Goldman L (2003). "Changes in rates of autopsy-detected diagnostic errors over time: a systematic review". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 289 (21): 2849–56. doi:10.1001/jama.289.21.2849. PMID 12783916.
  8. ^ Roulson J, Benbow EW, Hasleton PS (2005). "Discrepancies between clinical and autopsy diagnosis and the value of post mortem histology; a meta-analysis and review". Histopathology. 47 (6): 551–59. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2559.2005.02243.x. PMID 16324191. S2CID 7806867.
  9. ^ Combes A, Mokhtari M, Couvelard A, Trouillet JL, Baudot J, Hénin D, Gibert C, Chastre J (2004). "Clinical and autopsy diagnoses in the intensive care unit: a prospective study". Archives of Internal Medicine. 164 (4): 389–92. doi:10.1001/archinte.164.4.389. PMID 14980989.
  10. ^ Papadakis MA, Mangione CM, Lee KK, Kristof M (1991). "Treatable abdominal pathologic conditions and unsuspected malignant neoplasms at autopsy in veterans who received mechanical ventilation". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 265 (7): 885–87. doi:10.1001/jama.265.7.885. PMID 1992186.
  11. ^ a b c d Strasser, Russell S. (2008). "Autopsies". In Ayn Embar-seddon, Allan D. Pass (ed.). Forensic Science. Salem Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-58765-423-7.
  12. ^ Roberts IS, Benamore RE, Benbow EW, Lee SH, Harris JN, Jackson A, Mallett S, Patankar T, Peebles C, Roobottom C, Traill ZC (2012). "Post-mortem imaging as an alternative to autopsy in the diagnosis of adult deaths: A validation study". The Lancet. 379 (9811): 136–42. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61483-9. PMC 3262166. PMID 22112684.
  13. ^ Mahoney Criminal Defense Group
  14. ^ Barton L, Duval E, Stroberg E, Ghosh S, Mukhopadhyay S (April 2020). "COVID-19 autopsies, Oklahoma, USA". American Journal of Clinical Pathology. 153 (6): 725–733. doi:10.1093/ajcp/aqaa062. PMC 7184436. PMID 32275742.
  15. ^ Krywanczyk, Alison; Mount, Sharon (1 February 2018). "In Defense of the Academic Autopsy". Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine. 142 (2): 157–158. doi:10.5858/arpa.2017-0344-LE. ISSN 0003-9985. PMID 29372850.
  16. ^ Wichmann, Dominic; Obbelode, Frieder; Vogel, Hermann; Hoepker, Wilhelm Wolfgang; Nierhaus, Axel; Braune, Stephan; Sauter, Guido; Pueschel, Klaus; Kluge, Stefan (17 January 2012). "Virtual Autopsy as an Alternative to Traditional Medical Autopsy in the Intensive Care Unit". Annals of Internal Medicine. 156 (2): 123–130. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-156-2-201201170-00008. ISSN 0003-4819. PMID 22250143. S2CID 207536419.
  17. ^ Filograna, Laura; Pugliese, Luca; Muto, Massimo; Tatulli, Doriana; Guglielmi, Giuseppe; Thali, Michael John; Floris, Roberto (1 February 2019). "A Practical Guide to Virtual Autopsy: Why, When and How". Seminars in Ultrasound, CT and MRI. Forensic Radiology. 40 (1): 56–66. doi:10.1053/j.sult.2018.10.011. ISSN 0887-2171. PMID 30686369. S2CID 59304740.
  18. ^ UK Department for Constitutional Affairs (2006), Coroners Service Reform Briefing Note 2008-11-06 at the Wayback Machine, p. 6
  19. ^ Turnbull A.J.; Osborn M.; Nicholas N. (June 2015). "Hospital Autopsy: endangered or extinct?". Journal of Clinical Pathology. 68 (8): 601–04. doi:10.1136/jclinpath-2014-202700. PMC 4518760. PMID 26076965.
  20. ^ "Leichenschau: Gefahr durch Unterfinanzierung von Bernd Thode" (in German). Deutsches Ärzteblatt. 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  21. ^ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (1988) , Current Trends Autopsy Frequency – United States, 1980–1985, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 37(12);191–94
  22. ^ Pollock DA, O'Neil JM, Parrish RG, Combs DL, Annest JL (1993). "Temporal and geographic trends in the autopsy frequency of blunt and penetrating trauma deaths in the United States". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 269 (12): 1525–31. doi:10.1001/jama.1993.03500120063027. PMID 8445815.
  23. ^ "Products – Data Briefs – Number 67". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. August 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  24. ^ St Andrew's House (18 July 2007). "Inspectorate of Prosecution in Scotland – Death Cases: A Thematic Report on Liaison in Death Cases with Particular Reference to Organ Retention". Scottish Government.
  25. ^ Mărgăritescu O, Mogoantă L, Pirici I, Pirici D, Cernea D, Mărgăritescu C (2009). "Histopathological changes in acute ischemic stroke". Rom J Morphol Embryol. 50 (3): 327–39. PMID 19690757.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 March 2011.
  27. ^ a b c Schafer, Elizabeth D. (2008). "Ancient science and forensics". In Ayn Embar-seddon, Allan D. Pass (ed.). Forensic Science. Salem Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-1-58765-423-7.
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  29. ^ a b c Pappas, Stephanie (5 March 2013). "Grotesque Mummy Head Reveals Advanced Medieval Science". Live Science. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  30. ^ Maftouni, Nadia (2019). "Concept of sciart in the Andalusian Ibn Tufail". Pensamiento. Revista de Investigación e Información Filosófica. 75 (283 S.Esp): 543–551. doi:10.14422/pen.v75.i283.y2019.031. S2CID 171734089.
  31. ^ Battista Morgagni, Britannica Online Encyclopedia
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  33. ^ Küskü, Elif Aslan (1 January 2022). "Examination of Scientific Revolution Medicine on the Human Body / Bilimsel Devrim Tıbbını İnsan Bedeni Üzerinden İncelemek". The Legends Journal of European History Studies.
  34. ^ "Necropsy". University Animal Care, The University of Arizona. Retrieved 6 February 2017.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Autopsy at Wikiquote
  • Autopsy – a detailed description by a pathologist complete with cartoon figures.
  • The Virtual Autopsy – a site from the University of Leicester where one examines the patient, looks at the (medical) history and gets a try at the diagnosis.
  •  – An interactive exploration of a murder scene and the science involved in a criminalistic investigation: autopsy and laboratory expertise. Produced by the Montreal Science Centre for its namesake exhibition.
  • Autopsy checklist and reporting template at Patholines

autopsy, post, mortem, redirects, here, other, uses, post, mortem, disambiguation, this, article, about, medical, procedure, other, uses, disambiguation, autopsy, post, mortem, examination, obduction, necropsy, autopsia, cadaverum, surgical, procedure, that, c. Post mortem redirects here For other uses see Post mortem disambiguation This article is about the medical procedure For other uses see Autopsy disambiguation An autopsy post mortem examination obduction necropsy or autopsia cadaverum is a surgical procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a corpse by dissection to determine the cause mode and manner of death or the exam may be performed to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present for research or educational purposes For animals the term necropsy is generally reserved AutopsyThe Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp 1632 by Rembrandt depicts an autopsy ICD 9 CM89 8MeSHD001344 edit on Wikidata Autopsies are usually performed by a specialized medical doctor called a pathologist Only a small portion of deaths require an autopsy to be performed under certain circumstances In most cases a medical examiner or coroner can determine the cause of death Contents 1 Purposes of performance 2 Etymology 2 1 Autopsy 2 2 Post mortem 3 Purpose 4 Types 4 1 Forensic autopsy 4 2 Clinical autopsy 4 3 Academic autopsy 4 4 Virtual autopsy 5 Prevalence 6 Process 6 1 External examination 6 2 Internal examination 6 3 Reconstitution of the body 7 In stroke 8 History 9 Other animals necropsy 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksPurposes of performance EditAutopsies are performed for either legal or medical purposes Autopsies can be performed when any of the following information is desired Manner of death must be determined Determine if death was natural or unnatural Injury source and extent on the corpse Post mortem interval Determining the deceased s identity Retain relevant organs If it is an infant determine live birth and viabilityFor example a forensic autopsy is carried out when the cause of death may be a criminal matter while a clinical or academic autopsy is performed to find the medical cause of death and is used in cases of unknown or uncertain death or for research purposes Autopsies can be further classified into cases where external examination suffices and those where the body is dissected and internal examination is conducted Permission from next of kin may be required for internal autopsy in some cases Once an internal autopsy is complete the body is reconstituted by sewing it back together Etymology EditAutopsy Edit The term autopsy derives from the Ancient Greek aὐtopsia autopsia to see for oneself derived from aὐtos autos oneself and ὄpsis opsis sight view 1 The word has been in use since around the 17th century 2 Post mortem Edit The term post mortem derives from the Latin post after and mortem death It was first recorded in 1734 3 Purpose EditThe principal aims of an autopsy are to determine the cause of death mode of death manner of death the state of health of the person before he or she died and whether any medical diagnosis and treatment before death were appropriate In most Western countries the number of autopsies performed in hospitals has been decreasing every year since 1955 Critics including pathologist and former JAMA editor George D Lundberg have charged that the reduction in autopsies is negatively affecting the care delivered in hospitals because when mistakes result in death they are often not investigated and lessons therefore remain unlearned When a person has permitted an autopsy in advance of their death autopsies may also be carried out for the purposes of teaching or medical research An autopsy is frequently performed in cases of sudden death where a doctor is not able to write a death certificate or when death is believed to result from an unnatural cause These examinations are performed under a legal authority medical examiner coroner or procurator fiscal and do not require the consent of relatives of the deceased The most extreme example is the examination of murder victims especially when medical examiners are looking for signs of death or the murder method such as bullet wounds and exit points signs of strangulation or traces of poison Some religions including Judaism and Islam usually discourage the performing of autopsies on their adherents 4 Organizations such as ZAKA in Israel and Misaskim in the United States generally guide families on how to ensure that an unnecessary autopsy is not made Autopsies are used in clinical medicine to identify a medical error or a previously unnoticed condition that may endanger the living such as infectious diseases or exposure to hazardous materials 5 A study that focused on myocardial infarction heart attack as a cause of death found significant errors of omission and commission 6 i e a sizable number of cases ascribed to myocardial infarctions MIs were not MIs and a significant number of non MIs were MIs A systematic review of studies of the autopsy calculated that in about 25 of autopsies a major diagnostic error will be revealed 7 However this rate has decreased over time and the study projects that in a contemporary US institution 8 4 to 24 4 of autopsies will detect major diagnostic errors A large meta analysis suggested that approximately one third of death certificates are incorrect and that half of the autopsies performed produced findings that were not suspected before the person died 8 Also it is thought that over one fifth of unexpected findings can only be diagnosed histologically i e by biopsy or autopsy and that approximately one quarter of unexpected findings or 5 of all findings are major and can similarly only be diagnosed from tissue One study found that out of 694 diagnoses Autopsies revealed 171 missed diagnoses including 21 cancers 12 strokes 11 myocardial infarctions 10 pulmonary emboli and 9 endocarditis among others 9 Focusing on intubated patients one study found abdominal pathologic conditions abscesses bowel perforations or infarction were as frequent as pulmonary emboli as a cause of class I errors While patients with abdominal pathologic conditions generally complained of abdominal pain results of an examination of the abdomen were considered unremarkable in most patients and the symptom was not pursued 10 Types Edit Dissection room at the University of Helsinki in Finland in 1928 There are four main types of autopsy 11 Medico legal or forensic or coroner s autopsies seek to find the cause and manner of death and to identify the decedent 11 They are generally performed as prescribed by applicable law in cases of violent suspicious or sudden deaths deaths without medical assistance or during surgical procedures 11 Clinical or pathological autopsies are performed to diagnose a particular disease or for research purposes They aim to determine clarify or confirm medical diagnoses that remained unknown or unclear before the patient s death 11 Anatomical or academic autopsies are performed by students of anatomy for study purposes only Virtual or medical imaging autopsies are performed utilizing imaging technology only primarily magnetic resonance imaging MRI and computed tomography CT 12 Forensic autopsy Edit Autopsy room of the Charite Berlin Germany 2010 A forensic autopsy is used to determine the cause mode and manner of death Forensic science involves the application of the sciences to answer questions of interest to the legal system Medical examiners attempt to determine the time of death the exact cause of death and what if anything preceded the death such as a struggle A forensic autopsy may include obtaining biological specimens from the deceased for toxicological testing including stomach contents Toxicology tests may reveal the presence of one or more chemical poisons all chemicals in sufficient quantities can be classified as a poison and their quantity Because post mortem deterioration of the body together with the gravitational pooling of bodily fluids will necessarily alter the bodily environment toxicology tests may overestimate rather than underestimate the quantity of the suspected chemical 13 Following an in depth examination of all the evidence a medical examiner or coroner will assign a manner of death from the choices proscribed by the fact finder s jurisdiction and will detail the evidence on the mechanism of the death Clinical autopsy Edit Pathologist performing a human dissection of the abdominal and thoracic organs in an autopsy room Clinical autopsies serve two major purposes They are performed to gain more insight into pathological processes and determine what factors contributed to a patient s death For example material for infectious disease testing can be collected during an autopsy 14 Autopsies are also performed to ensure the standard of care at hospitals Autopsies can yield insight into how patient deaths can be prevented in the future Within the United Kingdom clinical autopsies can be carried out only with the consent of the family of the deceased person as opposed to a medico legal autopsy instructed by a Coroner England amp Wales or Procurator Fiscal Scotland to which the family cannot object citation needed Over time autopsies have not only been able to determine the cause of death but also lead to discoveries of various diseases such as fetal alcohol syndrome Legionnaire s disease and even viral hepatitis Academic autopsy Edit Academic autopsies are performed by students of anatomy for the purpose of study giving medical students and residents firsthand experience viewing anatomy and pathology Postmortem examinations require the skill to connect anatomic and clinical pathology together since they involve organ systems and interruptions from ante mortem and post mortem These academic autopsies allow for students to practice and develop skills in pathology and become meticulous in later case examinations 15 Virtual autopsy Edit Virtual autopsies are performed using radiographic techniques which can be used in post mortem examinations for a deceased individual 16 It is an alternative to medical autopsies where radiographs are used for example Magnetic resonance imaging MRI and Computed tomography CT scan which produce radiographic images in order to determine the cause of death the nature and the manner of death without dissecting the deceased It can also be used in the identification of the deceased 17 This method is helpful in determining the questions pertaining to an autopsy without putting the examiner at risk of biohazardous materials that can be in an individual s body Prevalence EditIn 2004 in England and Wales there were 514 000 deaths of which 225 500 were referred to the coroner Of those 115 800 22 5 of all deaths resulted in post mortem examinations and there were 28 300 inquests 570 with a jury 18 The rate of consented hospital autopsy in the UK and worldwide has declined rapidly over the past 50 years In the UK in 2013 only 0 7 of inpatient adult deaths were followed by consented autopsy 19 The autopsy rate in Germany is below 5 and thus much lower than in other countries in Europe The governmental reimbursement is hardly sufficient to cover all the costs so the medical journal Deutsches Arzteblatt issued by the German Medical Association makes the effort to raise awareness regarding the underfinancing of autopsies The same sources stated that autopsy rates in Sweden and Finland reach 20 to 30 20 In the United States autopsy rates fell from 17 in 1980 to 14 in 1985 21 and 11 5 in 1989 22 although the figures vary notably from county to county 23 Process Edit Cadaver dissection tables are similar to those used in medical or forensic autopsies The body is received at a medical examiner s office municipal mortuary or hospital in a body bag or evidence sheet A new body bag is used for each body to ensure that only evidence from that body is contained within the bag Evidence sheets are an alternative way to transport the body An evidence sheet is a sterile sheet that covers the body when it is moved If it is believed there may be any significant evidence on the hands for example gunshot residue or skin under the fingernails a separate paper sack is put around each hand and taped shut around the wrist There are two parts to the physical examination of the body the external and internal examination Toxicology biochemical tests or genetic testing molecular autopsy often supplement these and frequently assist the pathologist in assigning the cause or causes of death External examination Edit At many institutions the person responsible for handling cleaning and moving the body is called a diener the German word for servant In the UK this role is performed by an Anatomical Pathology Technician APT who will also assist the pathologist in eviscerating the body and reconstruction after the autopsy After the body is received it is first photographed The examiner then notes the kind of clothes if any and their position on the body before they are removed Next any evidence such as residue flakes of paint or other material is collected from the external surfaces of the body Ultraviolet light may also be used to search body surfaces for any evidence not easily visible to the naked eye Samples of hair nails and the like are taken and the body may also be radiographically imaged Once the external evidence is collected the body is removed from the bag undressed and any wounds present are examined The body is then cleaned weighed and measured in preparation for the internal examination A general description of the body as regards ethnic group sex age hair colour and length eye colour and other distinguishing features birthmarks old scar tissue moles tattoos etc is then made A voice recorder or a standard examination form is normally used to record this information In some countries citation needed e g Scotland France Germany Russia and Canada an autopsy may comprise an external examination only This concept is sometimes termed a view and grant The principle behind this is that the medical records history of the deceased and circumstances of death have all indicated as to the cause and manner of death without the need for an internal examination 24 Internal examination Edit If not already in place a plastic or rubber brick called a head block is placed under the shoulders of the corpse hyperflexion of the neck makes the spine arch backward while stretching and pushing the chest upward to make it easier to incise This gives the APT or pathologist maximum exposure to the trunk After this is done the internal examination begins The internal examination consists of inspecting the internal organs of the body by dissection for evidence of trauma or other indications of the cause of death For the internal examination there are a number of different approaches available a large and deep Y shaped incision can be made starting at the top of each shoulder and running down the front of the chest meeting at the lower point of the sternum breastbone a curved incision made from the tips of each shoulder in a semi circular line across the chest decolletage to approximately the level of the second rib curving back up to the opposite shoulder a single vertical incision is made from the sternal notch at the base of the neck a U shaped incision is made at the tip of both shoulders down along the side of the chest to the bottom of the rib cage following along it This is typically used on women and during chest only autopsies There is no need for any incision to be made which will be visible after completion of the examination when the deceased is dressed in a shroud In all of the above cases the incision then extends all the way down to the pubic bone making a deviation to either side of the navel and avoiding where possible transecting any scars that may be present Bleeding from the cuts is minimal or non existent because the pull of gravity is producing the only blood pressure at this point related directly to the complete lack of cardiac functionality However in certain cases there is anecdotal evidence that bleeding can be quite profuse especially in cases of drowning At this point shears are used to open the chest cavity The examiner uses the tool to cut through the ribs on the costal cartilage to allow the sternum to be removed this is done so that the heart and lungs can be seen in situ and that the heart in particular the pericardial sac is not damaged or disturbed from opening A PM 40 knife is used to remove the sternum from the soft tissue that attaches it to the mediastinum Now the lungs and the heart are exposed The sternum is set aside and will eventually be replaced at the end of the autopsy At this stage the organs are exposed Usually the organs are removed in a systematic fashion Making a decision as to what order the organs are to be removed will depend highly on the case in question Organs can be removed in several ways The first is the en masse technique of Letulle whereby all the organs are removed as one large mass The second is the en bloc method of Ghon The most popular in the UK is a modified version of this method which is divided into four groups of organs Although these are the two predominant evisceration techniques in the UK variations on these are widespread One method is described here The pericardial sac is opened to view the heart Blood for chemical analysis may be removed from the inferior vena cava or the pulmonary veins Before removing the heart the pulmonary artery is opened in order to search for a blood clot The heart can then be removed by cutting the inferior vena cava the pulmonary veins the aorta and pulmonary artery and the superior vena cava This method leaves the aortic arch intact which will make things easier for the embalmer The left lung is then easily accessible and can be removed by cutting the bronchus artery and vein at the hilum The right lung can then be similarly removed The abdominal organs can be removed one by one after first examining their relationships and vessels Most pathologists however prefer the organs to be removed all in one block Using dissection of the fascia blunt dissection using the fingers or hands and traction the organs are dissected out in one piece for further inspection and sampling During autopsies of infants this method is used almost all of the time The various organs are examined weighed and tissue samples in the form of slices are taken Even major blood vessels are cut open and inspected at this stage Next the stomach and intestinal contents are examined and weighed This could be useful to find the cause and time of death due to the natural passage of food through the bowel during digestion The more area empty the longer the deceased had gone without a meal before death A brain autopsy demonstrating signs of meningitis The forceps center are retracting the dura mater white Underneath the dura mater are the leptomeninges which appear to be edematous and have multiple small hemorrhagic foci Autopsy of a brain after sectioning showing a normal brain with the cerebrum cut in coronal sections and the cerebellum pons and medulla cut in horizontal sections Standard sections for microscopic examination are annotated The body block that was used earlier to elevate the chest cavity is now used to elevate the head To examine the brain an incision is made from behind one ear over the crown of the head to a point behind the other ear When the autopsy is completed the incision can be neatly sewn up and is not noticed when the head is resting on a pillow in an open casket funeral The scalp is pulled away from the skull in two flaps with the front flap going over the face and the rear flap over the back of the neck The skull is then cut with a circular or semicircular bladed reciprocating saw to create a cap that can be pulled off exposing the brain The brain is then observed in situ Then the brain s connection to the cranial nerves and spinal cord are severed and the brain is lifted out of the skull for further examination If the brain needs to be preserved before being inspected it is contained in a large container of formalin 15 percent solution of formaldehyde gas in buffered water for at least two but preferably four weeks This not only preserves the brain but also makes it firmer allowing easier handling without corrupting the tissue Reconstitution of the body Edit An important component of the autopsy is the reconstitution of the body such that it can be viewed if desired by relatives of the deceased following the procedure After the examination the body has an open and empty thoracic cavity with chest flaps open on both sides the top of the skull is missing and the skull flaps are pulled over the face and neck It is unusual to examine the face arms hands or legs internally In the UK following the Human Tissue Act 2004 all organs and tissue must be returned to the body unless permission is given by the family to retain any tissue for further investigation Normally the internal body cavity is lined with cotton wool or a similar material and the organs are then placed into a plastic bag to prevent leakage and are returned to the body cavity The chest flaps are then closed and sewn back together and the skull cap is sewed back in place Then the body may be wrapped in a shroud and it is common for relatives to not be able to tell the procedure has been done when the body is viewed in a funeral parlor after embalming In stroke Edit Cavitation at gross pathology of an old stroke in the left posterior parietal lobe An autopsy of stroke may be able to establish the time taken from the onset of cerebral infarction to the time of death Various microscopic findings are present at times from infarction as follows 25 Histopathology at high magnification of a normal neuron and an ischemic stroke at approximately 24 hours on H amp E stain The neurons become hypereosinophilic and there is an infiltrate of neutrophils There is slight edema and loss of normal architecture in the surrounding neuropil Finding PresenceEosinophilic red neurons 1 35 daysPolymorphonuclear leukocytes 1 37 daysOther acute neuronal injuries 1 60 daysCoagulative necrosis 1 day 5 yearsSpongiosis of surrounding tissue 1 day and olderAstrogliosis gemistocytes 2 days and olderNeo vascularization 3 days and olderHemosiderin pigment 3 days and olderMononuclear inflammatory cells 3 days 50 yearsMacrophages 3 days 50 yearsCavitation 12 days or older Micrograph showing cortical pseudolaminar necrosis a finding seen in strokes on medical imaging and at autopsy H amp E LFB stain Micrograph of the superficial cerebral cortex showing neuron loss and reactive astrocytes in a person that has had a stroke H amp E LFB stain History EditSee also History of dissection Dissection 19th century US Around 3000 BCE ancient Egyptians were one of the first civilizations to practice the removal and examination of the internal organs of humans in the religious practice of mummification 1 26 Autopsies that opened the body to determine the cause of death were attested at least in the early third millennium BCE although they were opposed in many ancient societies where it was believed that the outward disfigurement of dead persons prevented them from entering the afterlife 27 as with the Egyptians who removed the organs through tiny slits in the body 1 Notable Greek autopsists were Erasistratus and Herophilus of Chalcedon who lived in 3rd century BCE Alexandria but in general autopsies were rare in ancient Greece 27 In 44 BCE Julius Caesar was the subject of an official autopsy after his murder by rival senators the physician s report noting that the second stab wound Caesar received was the fatal one 27 Julius Caesar had been stabbed a total of 23 times 28 By around 150 BCE ancient Roman legal practice had established clear parameters for autopsies 1 The greatest ancient anatomist was Galen CE 129 c 216 whose findings would not be challenged until the Renaissance over a thousand years later 29 Autopsy 1890 by Enrique Simonet Ibn Tufail has elaborated on autopsy in his treatise called Hayy ibn Yaqzan and Nadia Maftouni discussing the subject in an extensive article believes him to be among the early supporters of autopsy and vivisection 30 The dissection of human remains for medical or scientific reasons continued to be practiced irregularly after the Romans for instance by the Arab physicians Avenzoar and Ibn al Nafis In Europe they were done with enough regularity to become skilled as early as 1200 and successful efforts to preserve the body by filling the veins with wax and metals 29 Until the 20th century 29 it was thought that the modern autopsy process derived from the anatomists of the Renaissance Giovanni Battista Morgagni 1682 1771 celebrated as the father of anatomical pathology 31 wrote the first exhaustive work on pathology De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomen Indagatis The Seats and Causes of Diseases Investigated by Anatomy 1769 1 In 1543 Andreas Vesalius conducted a public dissection of the body of a former criminal He asserted and articulated the bones this became the world s oldest surviving anatomical preparation It is still displayed at the Anatomical Museum at the University of Basel 32 In the mid 1800s Carl von Rokitansky and colleagues at the Second Vienna Medical School began to undertake dissections as a means to improve diagnostic medicine 28 The 19th century medical researcher Rudolf Virchow in response to a lack of standardization of autopsy procedures established and published specific autopsy protocols one such protocol still bears his name He also developed the concept of pathological processes 33 During the turn of the 20th century the Scotland Yard created the Office of the Forensic Pathologist a medical examiner trained in medicine charged with investigating the cause of all unnatural deaths including accidents homicides suicides etc Other animals necropsy Edit A field post mortem exam of a female sheep ewe A post mortem examination or necropsy is far more common in veterinary medicine than in human medicine For many species that exhibit few external symptoms sheep or that are not suited to detail clinical examination poultry cage birds zoo animals it is a common method used by veterinary physicians to come to a diagnosis A necropsy is mostly used like an autopsy to determine the cause of death The entire body is examined at the gross visual level and samples are collected for additional analyses 34 See also EditBody identification Forensic anthropology Forensic facial reconstruction Forensic identification Murder book Virtopsy VivisectionReferences Edit a b c d e Rothenberg Kelly 2008 The Autopsy Through History In Ayn Embar seddon Allan D Pass ed Forensic Science Salem Press p 100 ISBN 978 1 58765 423 7 Clark MJ 2005 Historical Keyword autopsy The Lancet 366 9499 1767 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 05 67715 X PMID 16298206 S2CID 208790970 post mortem adj Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 28 April 2020 Elizabeth C Burton Kim A Collins Religions and the Autopsy EMedicine Retrieved 2012 09 12 Michael Tsokos Die Klaviatur des Todes Knaur Munich 2013 pp 179 89 Ravakhah K 2006 Death certificates are not reliable revivification of the autopsy Southern Medical Journal 99 7 728 33 doi 10 1097 01 smj 0000224337 77074 57 PMID 16866055 S2CID 27913932 Shojania KG Burton EC McDonald KM Goldman L 2003 Changes in rates of autopsy detected diagnostic errors over time a systematic review JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 289 21 2849 56 doi 10 1001 jama 289 21 2849 PMID 12783916 Roulson J Benbow EW Hasleton PS 2005 Discrepancies between clinical and autopsy diagnosis and the value of post mortem histology a meta analysis and review Histopathology 47 6 551 59 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2559 2005 02243 x PMID 16324191 S2CID 7806867 Combes A Mokhtari M Couvelard A Trouillet JL Baudot J Henin D Gibert C Chastre J 2004 Clinical and autopsy diagnoses in the intensive care unit a prospective study Archives of Internal Medicine 164 4 389 92 doi 10 1001 archinte 164 4 389 PMID 14980989 Papadakis MA Mangione CM Lee KK Kristof M 1991 Treatable abdominal pathologic conditions and unsuspected malignant neoplasms at autopsy in veterans who received mechanical ventilation JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 265 7 885 87 doi 10 1001 jama 265 7 885 PMID 1992186 a b c d Strasser Russell S 2008 Autopsies In Ayn Embar seddon Allan D Pass ed Forensic Science Salem Press p 95 ISBN 978 1 58765 423 7 Roberts IS Benamore RE Benbow EW Lee SH Harris JN Jackson A Mallett S Patankar T Peebles C Roobottom C Traill ZC 2012 Post mortem imaging as an alternative to autopsy in the diagnosis of adult deaths A validation study The Lancet 379 9811 136 42 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 11 61483 9 PMC 3262166 PMID 22112684 Mahoney Criminal Defense Group Barton L Duval E Stroberg E Ghosh S Mukhopadhyay S April 2020 COVID 19 autopsies Oklahoma USA American Journal of Clinical Pathology 153 6 725 733 doi 10 1093 ajcp aqaa062 PMC 7184436 PMID 32275742 Krywanczyk Alison Mount Sharon 1 February 2018 In Defense of the Academic Autopsy Archives of Pathology amp Laboratory Medicine 142 2 157 158 doi 10 5858 arpa 2017 0344 LE ISSN 0003 9985 PMID 29372850 Wichmann Dominic Obbelode Frieder Vogel Hermann Hoepker Wilhelm Wolfgang Nierhaus Axel Braune Stephan Sauter Guido Pueschel Klaus Kluge Stefan 17 January 2012 Virtual Autopsy as an Alternative to Traditional Medical Autopsy in the Intensive Care Unit Annals of Internal Medicine 156 2 123 130 doi 10 7326 0003 4819 156 2 201201170 00008 ISSN 0003 4819 PMID 22250143 S2CID 207536419 Filograna Laura Pugliese Luca Muto Massimo Tatulli Doriana Guglielmi Giuseppe Thali Michael John Floris Roberto 1 February 2019 A Practical Guide to Virtual Autopsy Why When and How Seminars in Ultrasound CT and MRI Forensic Radiology 40 1 56 66 doi 10 1053 j sult 2018 10 011 ISSN 0887 2171 PMID 30686369 S2CID 59304740 UK Department for Constitutional Affairs 2006 Coroners Service Reform Briefing Note Archived 2008 11 06 at the Wayback Machine p 6 Turnbull A J Osborn M Nicholas N June 2015 Hospital Autopsy endangered or extinct Journal of Clinical Pathology 68 8 601 04 doi 10 1136 jclinpath 2014 202700 PMC 4518760 PMID 26076965 Leichenschau Gefahr durch Unterfinanzierung von Bernd Thode in German Deutsches Arzteblatt 2019 Retrieved 21 September 2019 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1988 Current Trends Autopsy Frequency United States 1980 1985 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 37 12 191 94 Pollock DA O Neil JM Parrish RG Combs DL Annest JL 1993 Temporal and geographic trends in the autopsy frequency of blunt and penetrating trauma deaths in the United States JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 269 12 1525 31 doi 10 1001 jama 1993 03500120063027 PMID 8445815 Products Data Briefs Number 67 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention August 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2017 St Andrew s House 18 July 2007 Inspectorate of Prosecution in Scotland Death Cases A Thematic Report on Liaison in Death Cases with Particular Reference to Organ Retention Scottish Government Mărgăritescu O Mogoantă L Pirici I Pirici D Cernea D Mărgăritescu C 2009 Histopathological changes in acute ischemic stroke Rom J Morphol Embryol 50 3 327 39 PMID 19690757 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Medicine Archived from the original on 9 March 2011 a b c Schafer Elizabeth D 2008 Ancient science and forensics In Ayn Embar seddon Allan D Pass ed Forensic Science Salem Press p 43 ISBN 978 1 58765 423 7 a b Bryant Clifton Handbook of Death and Dying California Sage Publications Inc 2003 Print ISBN 0 7619 2514 7 a b c Pappas Stephanie 5 March 2013 Grotesque Mummy Head Reveals Advanced Medieval Science Live Science Retrieved 7 May 2018 Maftouni Nadia 2019 Concept of sciart in the Andalusian Ibn Tufail Pensamiento Revista de Investigacion e Informacion Filosofica 75 283 S Esp 543 551 doi 10 14422 pen v75 i283 y2019 031 S2CID 171734089 Battista Morgagni Britannica Online Encyclopedia The Fabric of the human body Stanford University Retrieved 6 February 2017 Kusku Elif Aslan 1 January 2022 Examination of Scientific Revolution Medicine on the Human Body Bilimsel Devrim Tibbini Insan Bedeni Uzerinden Incelemek The Legends Journal of European History Studies Necropsy University Animal Care The University of Arizona Retrieved 6 February 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Autopsies Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Autopsy Quotations related to Autopsy at Wikiquote Autopsy a detailed description by a pathologist complete with cartoon figures The Virtual Autopsy a site from the University of Leicester where one examines the patient looks at the medical history and gets a try at the diagnosis Autopsy of a Murder An interactive exploration of a murder scene and the science involved in a criminalistic investigation autopsy and laboratory expertise Produced by the Montreal Science Centre for its namesake exhibition Autopsy checklist and reporting template at Patholines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Autopsy amp oldid 1144081597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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