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Journal Article

Citation

Sifaoui I, Nedelcu C, Beltran G, Dupont V, Lebigot J, Gaudin A, Ridereau Zins C, Rouge Maillard C, Aubé C. Diagn. Interv. Imaging 2017; 98(5): 393-400.

Affiliation

Department of Radiology, Angers University Hospital Centre, 4, rue Larrey, 49000 Angers, France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.diii.2016.08.019

PMID

28215550

Abstract

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to assess the performances of unenhanced post-mortem computed tomography (CT) to detect thoracic injuries in violent death.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospectively, we conducted a review of unenhanced CT scans of 67 victims of violent deaths with thoracic injuries and compared CT findings with the results of clinical autopsy. Our gold standard was a comparison of CT scans with autopsy discussed in a monthly forensic radiology multidisciplinary team meeting (MDTM). The data were collected by organ system: heart, pericardium, aorta, lungs, pleura, bone, and diaphragm and performance indices (sensitivity, specificity, accuracy) were calculated.

RESULTS: Pleural (59/67) and bone (55/67) injuries detected on CT were also found at autopsy and confirmed by the MDTM (sensitivity and specificity 100%). Seventeen out of 67 diaphragmatic lesions were visible on CT. Eighteen out of 67 were confirmed during MDTM after autopsy, yielding overall sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 98%. Forty out of 67 lung contusions were found on CT with two false positives and one false negative yielding 95% sensitivity for CT with a specificity of 96%, and accuracy of 95%. Fourteen out of 67 aortic injuries were found on CT compared to 19 confirmed during MDTM (sensitivity 74%, specificity 85%, accuracy 82%). In terms of pericardial lesions, 19/67 were found on CT and 20 on autopsy and confirmed during MDTM (sensitivity 80%, specificity 94%, accuracy 85%). Ten out of 10/67 cardiac lesions were visible on CT imaging and 15 found on autopsy and confirmed during MDTM (sensitivity 57%, specificity 94%, accuracy 81%).

CONCLUSION: Unenhanced post-mortem CT performs well to detect pleural, pulmonary, bone and diaphragmatic injuries but less well to identify cardiac and aortic injuries, for which the use of indirect signs is essential.

Copyright © 2016 Editions françaises de radiologie. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Autopsy; Post-mortem CT scan; Thorax; Violent death

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