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Journal Article

Citation

Puzović V, Bakovic M, Bubalo P, Mayer D. Forensic Sci. Int. Rep. 2020; 2: e100139.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.fsir.2020.100139

PMID

38620729

PMCID

PMC7832276

Abstract

Coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) has rapidly evolved into a pandemic during the first months of 2020. The general extent of organ involvement, as well as microscopic changes in the organs of the diseased remains insufficiently documented so far. Herein we are reporting the case of a Caucasian male who apparently died in a workplace allegedly by a fall from height and was found to be SARS-CoV-2 positive just prior to the autopsy. The circumstances of his death required a medicolegal investigation. Gross autopsy findings included minor external injuries and focal subarachnoid hemorrhage together with ribs and sternum fractures resulting from resuscitation attempt. In addition, visceral congestion was noticed, especially visible in lungs. Traumatic findings suitable to explain sudden death were absent. However, lungs histopathology analysis revealed diffuse alveolar damage with massive capillary congestion. Pathology in other organs included myocardial fibrosis, left ventricular hypertrophy, severe generalized atherosclerosis, glomerulosclerosis, focal liver necrosis, liver microabscesses and intrahepatal cholestasis. Lab test confirmed the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in nasopharygeal swab taken postmortem. Only afterwards, the investigation brought out that he was suffering complaints consistent with respiratory infection in the days before death. Based on all findings, the death was ruled as natural, caused by COVID-19. Learnings from this case urge medical staff in the autopsy suite to consider the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in sudden deaths during the pandemic, to enable adequate personal protection gear is worn and to ensure the proper cause of death is determined where misleading circumstances exist.


Language: en

Keywords

Diffuse alveolar damage; Forensic autopsy; Histopathology; SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19 (may be used interchangeably) death; Work-related accident

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