A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages
© 2020, The Author(s). Estimating the postmortem interval (PMI) is one of the major tasks and a continuous challenge in forensic pathology. It is often an exclusion process of available methods, which ultimately can lead to an unsatisfactory outcome due to poor reliability. This problem is most acut...
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th-cmuir.6653943832-708132020-10-14T08:41:53Z A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages Stefan Pittner Valentina Bugelli Katharina Weitgasser Angela Zissler Sangob Sanit Lena Lutz Fabio Monticelli Carlo P. Campobasso Peter Steinbacher Jens Amendt Medicine © 2020, The Author(s). Estimating the postmortem interval (PMI) is one of the major tasks and a continuous challenge in forensic pathology. It is often an exclusion process of available methods, which ultimately can lead to an unsatisfactory outcome due to poor reliability. This problem is most acute in the late PMI, when decomposition proceeds and some methods (such as rigor, livor, and algor mortis) are no longer applicable. Several methods, such as forensic entomology, skeletal muscle protein degradation, and the study of body decomposition by application of a morphological scoring, are expected to provide further information; however, all have certain limitations and weaknesses. Availability of a tool-box of methods allows a case-specific selection of the most appropriate one(s), or eventually provides improvements in the overall accuracy and precision of the PMI estimation by merging and combining methods. To investigate practical (field) application, eventual interferences, and/or synergetic effects, as well as the robustness of these methods towards specific influencing factors, a field study was conducted, using eight pig cadavers of different body weights and physical coverage, left to decompose under natural conditions for 16 days. Morphological changes during decomposition were assessed using the total body score (TBS), muscle samples were collected to analyze protein degradation, and insect colonization was evaluated. The results reveal strengths and current limitations of all tested methods, as well as promising synergistic effects, and thus, provide a baseline for targeted future research. 2020-10-14T08:41:53Z 2020-10-14T08:41:53Z 2020-07-01 Journal 14371596 09379827 2-s2.0-85084647013 10.1007/s00414-020-02278-0 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85084647013&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/70813 |
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Medicine Stefan Pittner Valentina Bugelli Katharina Weitgasser Angela Zissler Sangob Sanit Lena Lutz Fabio Monticelli Carlo P. Campobasso Peter Steinbacher Jens Amendt A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
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© 2020, The Author(s). Estimating the postmortem interval (PMI) is one of the major tasks and a continuous challenge in forensic pathology. It is often an exclusion process of available methods, which ultimately can lead to an unsatisfactory outcome due to poor reliability. This problem is most acute in the late PMI, when decomposition proceeds and some methods (such as rigor, livor, and algor mortis) are no longer applicable. Several methods, such as forensic entomology, skeletal muscle protein degradation, and the study of body decomposition by application of a morphological scoring, are expected to provide further information; however, all have certain limitations and weaknesses. Availability of a tool-box of methods allows a case-specific selection of the most appropriate one(s), or eventually provides improvements in the overall accuracy and precision of the PMI estimation by merging and combining methods. To investigate practical (field) application, eventual interferences, and/or synergetic effects, as well as the robustness of these methods towards specific influencing factors, a field study was conducted, using eight pig cadavers of different body weights and physical coverage, left to decompose under natural conditions for 16 days. Morphological changes during decomposition were assessed using the total body score (TBS), muscle samples were collected to analyze protein degradation, and insect colonization was evaluated. The results reveal strengths and current limitations of all tested methods, as well as promising synergistic effects, and thus, provide a baseline for targeted future research. |
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Stefan Pittner Valentina Bugelli Katharina Weitgasser Angela Zissler Sangob Sanit Lena Lutz Fabio Monticelli Carlo P. Campobasso Peter Steinbacher Jens Amendt |
author_facet |
Stefan Pittner Valentina Bugelli Katharina Weitgasser Angela Zissler Sangob Sanit Lena Lutz Fabio Monticelli Carlo P. Campobasso Peter Steinbacher Jens Amendt |
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Stefan Pittner |
title |
A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
title_short |
A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
title_full |
A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
title_fullStr |
A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
title_full_unstemmed |
A field study to evaluate PMI estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
title_sort |
field study to evaluate pmi estimation methods for advanced decomposition stages |
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2020 |
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85084647013&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/70813 |
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