TY - JOUR
T1 - Craniocerebral trauma inflicted by television falls
AU - Deisch, Jeremy
AU - Quinton, Reade
AU - Gruszecki, Amy C.
N1 - CASE REPORTPATHOLOGY/BIOLOGY First published: Additional information and reprint requests:Amy C. Gruszecki, D.O.American ForensicsPO Box 550846Dallas, TX 75355E‐mail: [email protected] Presented at the 61st Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, February 16-21, 2009 in Denver, CO. Get access to the full version of this article. View access options below.
PY - 2011/7
Y1 - 2011/7
N2 - Accidents and inflicted trauma account for 33% and 5-8% of childhood deaths, respectively. Injuries secondary to falling televisions have been reported in the clinical literature. However, descriptions of such injuries at autopsy are limited. The severity and patterns of injury may mimic those considered ''typical'' of inflicted trauma. Thus, integration of data from clinical, scene investigation, and autopsy is necessary for determination of the cause and manner of death. We present autopsy findings from two cases which illustrate injuries sustained from falling televisions. Findings common to both cases include subscalpular hemorrhages, skull fractures, subdural hemorrhages, brain injuries, and optic nerve sheath hemorrhages. The first case showed postsurgical changes secondary to evacuation of a posterior fossa hematoma; three-dimensional reconstruction of the admission computed tomography scan demonstrated the extent of the preintervention skull fractures. In addition, the second case showed a right epidural hematoma. Only case two showed retinal hemorrhage.
AB - Accidents and inflicted trauma account for 33% and 5-8% of childhood deaths, respectively. Injuries secondary to falling televisions have been reported in the clinical literature. However, descriptions of such injuries at autopsy are limited. The severity and patterns of injury may mimic those considered ''typical'' of inflicted trauma. Thus, integration of data from clinical, scene investigation, and autopsy is necessary for determination of the cause and manner of death. We present autopsy findings from two cases which illustrate injuries sustained from falling televisions. Findings common to both cases include subscalpular hemorrhages, skull fractures, subdural hemorrhages, brain injuries, and optic nerve sheath hemorrhages. The first case showed postsurgical changes secondary to evacuation of a posterior fossa hematoma; three-dimensional reconstruction of the admission computed tomography scan demonstrated the extent of the preintervention skull fractures. In addition, the second case showed a right epidural hematoma. Only case two showed retinal hemorrhage.
KW - Accident
KW - Autopsy
KW - Craniocerebral trauma
KW - Forensic science
KW - Inflicted trauma
KW - Manner of death
KW - Television
KW - Tipover
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2011.01765.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2011.01765.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 21470230
SN - 0022-1198
VL - 56
SP - 1049
EP - 1053
JO - Journal of Forensic Sciences
JF - Journal of Forensic Sciences
IS - 4
ER -