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Postmortem Computed Tomography in Firearm Homicides: A Retrospective Case Series,
Authors:Marloes E M Vester MD  PhD  Kurt B Nolte MD  PhD  Gary M Hatch MD  Chandra Y Gerrard MPH  BS  Reinoud D Stoel PhD  Rick R van Rijn MD  PhD
Institution:1. Department of Forensic Medicine, Netherlands Forensic Institute, Laan van Ypenburg 6, 2497 GB The Hague, The Netherlands;2. Office of the Medical Investigator, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, 1101 Camino de Salud, Albuquerque, NM, 87102;3. Department of Forensic Medicine, Netherlands Forensic Institute, Laan van Ypenburg 6, 2497 GB The Hague, The Netherlands

Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract:Postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) is integrated into the evaluation of decedents in several American medical examiner offices and medicolegal death investigative centers in many other countries. We retrospectively investigated the value of PMCT in a series of firearm homicide cases from a statewide centralized medical examiner’s office that occurred during 2016. Autopsies were performed or supervised by board-certified forensic pathologists who reviewed the PMCT scans prior to autopsy. PMCT scans were re-evaluated by a forensic radiologist blinded to the autopsy findings and scored by body region (head–neck, thoracoabdominal, and extremities). Injury discrepancies were scored using a modified Goldman classification and analyzed with McNemar’s test. We included 60 males and 20 females (median age 31 years, range 3–73). Based on PMCT, 56 (79.1%) cases had injuries relevant to the cause of death in a single body region (24 head–neck region, 32 thoracoabdominal region). Out of these 56 cases, 9 had a missed major diagnosis by PMCT outside that region, including 6 extremity injuries visible during standard external examination. Yet all had evident lethal firearm injury. We showed that PMCT identifies major firearm injuries in homicide victims and excludes injuries related to the cause of death in other regions when a single body region is injured. Although PMCT has a known limited sensitivity for soft tissue and vascular pathology, it can be combined with external examination to potentially reduce or focus dissections in some of these cases depending on the circumstances and medicolegal needs.
Keywords:autopsy  tomography  X-ray computed  forensic pathology  gunshot sounds  postmortem computed tomography (PMCT)  forensic ballistics
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