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Anoxic anoxia: This is mainly %%due to mechanical asphyxia leading to defective oxygenation in lungs.%%
Anemic anoxia: This is mainly due to the %%reduced oxygen carrying capacity of blood%%.
Histotoxic anoxia: This is mainly due to the %%depression of tissue oxidation%%.
Stagnant anoxia: This is mainly due to the %%inefficient circulation of blood%%.
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Clinical Features of Asphyxia:
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Manner of death — explains %%how the cause of death came about.%% It is generally considered to be natural, homicide, suicide, accident, and undetermined.
Manner of death is ‘undetermined’, when the facts are insufficient about circumstances surrounding the death, or when the %%cause of death is unknown%%.
Suicide, accident, homicide, natural and undetermined, some people use the term ‘unclassified’. This also refers to death in which the %%cause and circumstances are not know%%n.
Agonal Period: It is the %%time between a lethal occurrence and death%%.
Time of Death: The time at which brain stem death is established. This does not coincide with the time when the ventilator is switched off; or heartbeat ceases.
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Death and the Indian Penal Code (IPC): Section 46, IPC, states the fact that the word ‘death’ denotes death of a human being unless the contrary appears from this context.
Disposal of the Body: During cremation of a dead body immediately after somatic death, spontaneous movements of hand or feet may be observed in the cadaver on the funeral pyre, creating an impression that the person is not actually dead and the disposal is premature.
Tissue and Organ Transplantation: Viability of transplantable tissues and organs falls sharply after somatic death; a liver must be removed within 15 minutes, kidney within 45 minutes and heart within an hour.
Question of Presumption of Survivorship: When two or more persons die at almost the same time, or by a common accident, the question may arise who survived the longest; and if no direct evidence on this point is available the question becomes one of presumption of survivorship.
Issuing of Death Certificate: This is issued after everything are tested; the cause of death are determined; and the important information about the dead is provided.
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Insensibility — comprises %%complete loss of response to sensation%%.
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It is the %%complete stoppage of respiration for more than 3 minutes.%%
Tests for confirming cessation of breathing:
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By measuring the rectal temperature by introducing the bulb, 8 to 10 cm deep into the rectum.
By measuring the inner core body temperature by placing the bulb in contact with the inferior surface of liver through a midline incision.
By measuring vaginal temperature by inserting the bulb 8 to 10 cm deep into the vagina.
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In temperate climate, the cooling rate is:
Graphical method of calculation of PMI: Record at least 3-4 temperature readings at 0.5 to 1 hour intervals and plot a graph with temperature v/s time. The interval at which it cuts 37.2°C is the postmortem interval (PMI).
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Postmortem lividity — the %%purplish or reddish purple areas of discoloration of skin%% and organs after death due to accumulation of blood in dependent parts of the body and seen through the skin.
After death, blood in its fluid state gravitates into the toneless capillaries and venules of the ‘rete mucosum’ in the dependent parts of the body and causes capillo venous distension, which through the skin imparts a discoloration to the area involved.
The lividity appears by 1 to 3 hours of death.
In a dead body lying on the back, it will be evident in the posterior portion of the cerebral lobes, cerebellum, in pial vessels in the posterior fossa, posterior surface of heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, spleen, larynx, stomach and intestines.
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Rigor Mortis — the postmortem %%stiffening/rigidity of the muscles in a dead body%%.
It is basically due to the depletion of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) reserve from the muscle.
Instantaneous Rigor — A rare condition in which e%%xtremely rapid muscle stiffening occurs after cardiac arrest%%.
Rigor mortis disappears with onset of decomposition.
Testing for rigor in cadaver is done by trying to open eyelids, depressing the jaw, gently bending the neck and various joints of the body and noting the degree and distribution.
Primary Flaccidity: Immediately after death, as the control from brain on each of the muscles is lost and every muscle of the body shows complete relaxation.
Secondary Flaccidity: When the molecular death has occurred in each of the actin and myosin filaments, the muscular stiffness that had developed earlier in the previous stage will begin to disappear slowly and gradually, relaxing the body back to its original state.
Rigor mortis sets on within %%1 to 2 hours after death%%, and is well developed from head to toes in about 12 hours.
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Cadaveric spasm — condition wherein %%stiffening occurs in certain groups of muscles%%, which were already in a state of contraction at the time of death.
Heat stiffening: The attitude of a boxer in self-defense - taken up by the body in death, %%due to heat coagulation of muscle proteins%%.
Cold stiffening: Here muscles are %%stiff due to solidification of fat and freezing of body fluid%% due to the extreme cold.
Gas stiffening — this is due to %%accumulation of putrefaction gasses in the tissues so as to cause a false rigidity%% resulting in stiff limbs.
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Skeletonization — the %%complete decomposition of the non-bony tissues of a corpse%%, leading to a bare skeleton.
In a temperate climate, it usually requires %%three months to several years%% for a body to completely decompose into a skeleton, depending on factors such as temperature, the presence of insects, and submergence in a substrate such as water.
In the tropics, skeletonization can %%occur in weeks%%.
In the Andes Mountains or Tundra, skeletonization will %%never occur if subzero temperatures persist%%.
After skeletonization has occurred, the human skeleton takes about %%twenty years under optimal conditions to be completely dissolved by acids%% in the soil leaving no trace of the organism.
In neutral pH soil or sand, the skeleton will persist for at least several thousand years before it finally disintegrates.
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The process of skeletonization takes varied time under varied conditions.
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Mummification — a modified process of putrefaction, wherein the water content in the dead body gets evaporated making it dehydrated or desiccated and shriveled up, the natural appearances and features of the body are retained.
Factors influencing: Body in dry place with warm, dry air circulation.
Appearance: Whole body gets converted into a hard, dry, leathery mass and the features will remain as they are.
Time required—several weeks.
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Embalming: This process renders the proteins to get coagulated, tissues fixed, organs bleached and hardened, blood coagulated and converted into pinkish-brown mass.
Freezing: If a body is kept in deep freeze or amidst thick layers of ice, it can remain in good preservation for a long time.
Taxidermy: This process can be adapted for preservation of the dead body, especially when it is to be taken from one place to another for burial or to avoid putrefaction before cremation or burial, which might take some time.
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