0% found this document useful (0 votes)
243 views59 pages

Autopsy

Thank you for the informative presentation on refining the basic autopsy technique.

Uploaded by

MacrossBala
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
243 views59 pages

Autopsy

Thank you for the informative presentation on refining the basic autopsy technique.

Uploaded by

MacrossBala
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 59

AUTOPSY

Gleaned from…
REFINING THE BASIC
AUTOPSY TECHNIQUE

Maria Cecilia F. Lim, MD, FPSP


Associate Professor
UP College of Medicine
Topics for Discussion:
• Getting the consent
• Pre-Autopsy
• Basic autopsy technique and
variations
• Ancillary procedures
• Special techniques
• Documentation
• The autopsy report
• Retention periods and storage
Getting the Consent
Getting the Consent
Some do’s:
• Send the best person to get the
consent
• Appeal for the deceased
• Appeal for the next of kin
• Appeal for the general public
• Be sympathetic
• Do assure confidentiality of results
Getting the Consent
Some Don’ts:
• Do not be “graphic”.
• Do not lie.
FAQ
• How extensive should the explanation of the
autopsy be?
– The purpose and scope of the autopsy should be
disclosed.
– The person should be given the opportunity to
place limitations.
• Can we keep the organs?
– Explicit authorization necessary.
• Do we need a separate consent for incisions
outside the brain and chest incisions?
FAQ
• Is the autopsy really forbidden by
religion?

• … In lieu of an autopsy, these


procedures may alleviate the need to
perform a complete autopsy in the
presence of religious objections
In lieu of…
• In-depth investigation of the scene,
environment, terminal circumstances,
and social and medical history of the
deceased

• Careful exclusion of criminal act


suspicion

• External examination
In lieu of…
• Radiographs or other imaging studies

• Toxicology or other analysis performed


on blood, urine, gastric samples, or
cerebrospinal fluid obtained
percutaneously
In lieu of…
• Endoscopic examination

• In situ or minimal procedure


examinations
Consent
• Should contain
– Explanation of the autopsy
– Removal and retention of organs
– Disposition of remains
Who will give the consent?
• Consent from the deceased prior to
death*

• An “attorney-in-fact” appointed as a
result of the decedent’s execution of a
durable power of attorney for health
care and authorized to consent to an
autopsy
Who will give the consent?
• Spouse (not legally separated or
divorced unless he or she has custody
of eldest child who is a minor)

• Adult child age 18 or older

• Adult grandchild
Who will give the consent?
• Parent

• Adult sibling

• Grandparents

• Adult uncles and aunts


Who will give the consent?
• Other adult relative

• Friend accepting responsibility for


disposition of the body

• Public official acting within his or her


legal authority
Pre-Autopsy
Special Procedures
• Photography
• Fingerprinting
• Collection of rape kit
• Collection of insect specimens
on decomposed remains.
• Collection of gunshot residue.
Special Procedures
• Radiographs performed on:
– GSW
– Decomposed bodies
– Fire deaths
– Suspect child abuse
The Autopsy
External Examination
• Age, height, weight, sex, race, hair
color, eye color, state of nutrition,
muscular devt, teeth, congenital or
acquired abnormalities/deformities
• Presence of scars, pigmented skin
lesions and tattoos
• Anthropophagic markings
Evidence of Previous Medical
Treatment/Embalming
• Resuscitative attempts may
masquerade as traumatic injuries
preceding medical care.
Evidence of Injury
• Described in detail:
– Size, shape, pattern
– Correlate with internal exam (course,
direction, depth)
– Location in relation to fixed anatomic
landmarks
• Collect your specimens and store at 4 deg
Celsius:
– Blood : peripheral and central
*Sodium fluoride for tox
*EDTA for DNA
– Urine
– Bile
– Vitreous fluid
– Stomach
4 Types of
Evisceration Techniques
En Masse (Le Tulle)

• Organs are removed as a single bulky


aggregate.
• Adv:
– Complete preservation of relationships among
organs
– Speed
– Organs removed and stored for later dissection
• Disadv:
– Difficult to handle; require assistant
En Bloc (Ghon/Zenker)

• Maintain all connections between


physiologically related organs:
– thoracic pluck, coeliac pluck, urogenital pluck
• Adv:
– Preserve impt anatomic relations without unwieldy
mass of organs
• Disadv:
– Multiple organ system involvement complicates
the procedure
– Skill necessary to remove each block from the
body intact
Virchow’s
• All organs examined systematically.
• Brain  spinal cord  abdominal
cavity  thoracic cavity  organs
individually removed and sectioned
outside the body.
• Adv: systematic approach and
simplicity for beginning prosectors
• Disadv: destruction of anatomic
relationships.
Rokitansky (in situ)
• Basic principle: Disturb the connections
between organs as little as possible.
• Dissection occurs in situ with little
actual evisceration.
• If abnormality is found, regions
removed intact  combination of en
bloc and in situ
Rokitansky (in situ)
• Adv:
– Practical for single examiner
– Capability of preserving abnormal
anatomic relationships
• Disadv:
– Expertise necessary to recognize
abnormalities
Histologic Sampling
• All grossly abnormal tissues
• All major organs
– Brain: cerebral cortex
hippocampus
basal ganglia with caudate & putamen
cerebellum with cortex & dentate nucleus
brain stem
Ancillary Studies
Microbiologic Studies
• Sample should be obtained as soon
after opening the body as possible,
prior to extensive manipulation
especially the intestines.
• Cultures should be collected within 15
hours after death.
• Samples:
– Blood from right atrium or IVC or
subclavian
– Tissues: spleen
The isolate is more likely
significant if
• The postmortem interval from death to
autopsy is shorter
• The more ante/postmortem cultures
yield the same organism
• The fewer the other organisms isolated
• Organisms isolated from postmortem
blood correspond to organisms causing
infection in tissue sections
Toxicology
• Drugs, alcohol, toxins
– Best: urine (antemortem samples if
possible)
– Blood from peripheral source (gray top)
– Tissues: Liver, kidney, skeletal muscle,
brain (100 gm)
• Electrolytes, Urea, Creatinine, Glucose,
Ketones
– Vitreous
Toxicology
• Stable after death:
– Hb, Hct
– Cholesterol
– TSH
– Cortisol
– Insulin and C peptide
– Place blood in marbled red top (serum
separator) tube
Radiographic Studies
• Ecopsy – echography-guided biopsy
• Postmortem angiography -
documentation of vascular
malformations (aneurysms, “leak”)
Rapid PAD
• Frozen section
• Cytology and Core Needle Biopsy
– Rosai – “Posthumous analysis”
Of limited value
• Cytogenetics
• Molecular studies
• Flow cytometry
DOCUMENTATION
Forms of Documentation

• Note-taking
• Photos
• Video
• Audio
Note-Taking
• Body diagrams
Photography
• Always label (case number, ruler)
• Bracket your shots
• Be careful of lighting
• Take shots of all pertinent findings
Guidelines for Ensuring
Admissibility of Digital Images
• Develop a departmental policy or
standardized procedure on digital
imaging including image security and
chain of custody.
• Preserve the original.
• Do not replace or overwrite the
original file with a new file.
THE AUTOPSY REPORT
List of Standardized First-Level
Headings
• Autopsy face sheet
• Historical summary
• Examination type, date, time, place,
assistants, attendees
• Presentation, clothing, personal effects,
associated items
• Evidence of medical intervention
• Postmortem changes
List of Standardized First-Level
Headings
• Postmortem imaging studies
• Features of identification
• External examination
• Internal examination
• Summary of injuries
• Ancillary procedures, lab results
• Block listing and histologic description
List of Standardized First-Level
Headings
• Findings and diagnosis
• Summary and comments
• Cause-of-death statement
• Amendments
Retention of Records & Materials
• Wet stock tissue 3 yrs
• Wet tissue of whole organs 3 mos
• Paraffin blocks 20 yrs
• Reports indefinitely
• Slides indefinitely
• Gross photographs indefinitely
Retention of Records & Materials
• Accession log records indefinitely
• Serum/CSF/urine 2 yrs
• Whole blood 6 mos
• Dried blood stain or
frozen tissue for DNA indefinitely
• Frozen tissue for tox 6 mos
On embalming
• It is always preferable to perform an
autopsy before embalming.
– Altered injuries and findings
– No specimen for tox, microbiology,
cytogenetic, biochemical or molecular
genetics studies
• Only of benefit in infectious diseases
(ex: HIV)

You might also like