[Differential diagnostic aspects of forensically relevant findings in the brain stem]

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[Differential diagnostic aspects of forensically relevant findings in the brain stem]. / Matschke, Jakob; Tsokos, M; Schulz, F; Lockemann, Ute.

in: Arch Kriminol, Jahrgang 203, Nr. 3-4, 3-4, 1999, S. 108-116.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{2682306e90b1467fb17aaa244f5eb1fc,
title = "[Differential diagnostic aspects of forensically relevant findings in the brain stem]",
abstract = "Because of the extreme dense accumulation of vital structures (compared with other regions of the central nervous system), in the brainstem even small lesions may cause serious clinical symptoms. Judging the forensic relevance of macroscopically visible lesions requires the knowledge of the respective possible diagnosis. As shown in three case reports (67 years, teleangiectasis; 35 years, cavernoma; 49 years, secondary hemorrhage following trauma) this demands apart from the knowledge of the normal and pathological anatomy of the brainstem always the use of histological methods.",
author = "Jakob Matschke and M Tsokos and F Schulz and Ute Lockemann",
year = "1999",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "203",
pages = "108--116",
journal = "Arch Kriminol",
issn = "0003-9225",
publisher = "Verlag Schmidt-Romhild",
number = "3-4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - [Differential diagnostic aspects of forensically relevant findings in the brain stem]

AU - Matschke, Jakob

AU - Tsokos, M

AU - Schulz, F

AU - Lockemann, Ute

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - Because of the extreme dense accumulation of vital structures (compared with other regions of the central nervous system), in the brainstem even small lesions may cause serious clinical symptoms. Judging the forensic relevance of macroscopically visible lesions requires the knowledge of the respective possible diagnosis. As shown in three case reports (67 years, teleangiectasis; 35 years, cavernoma; 49 years, secondary hemorrhage following trauma) this demands apart from the knowledge of the normal and pathological anatomy of the brainstem always the use of histological methods.

AB - Because of the extreme dense accumulation of vital structures (compared with other regions of the central nervous system), in the brainstem even small lesions may cause serious clinical symptoms. Judging the forensic relevance of macroscopically visible lesions requires the knowledge of the respective possible diagnosis. As shown in three case reports (67 years, teleangiectasis; 35 years, cavernoma; 49 years, secondary hemorrhage following trauma) this demands apart from the knowledge of the normal and pathological anatomy of the brainstem always the use of histological methods.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 203

SP - 108

EP - 116

JO - Arch Kriminol

JF - Arch Kriminol

SN - 0003-9225

IS - 3-4

M1 - 3-4

ER -