A comparison on the detection accuracy of ante mortem computed tomography vs. autopsy for the diagnosis of pelvic ring injury in legal medicine

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A comparison on the detection accuracy of ante mortem computed tomography vs. autopsy for the diagnosis of pelvic ring injury in legal medicine. / Höch, Andreas; Özkurtul, Orkun; Hammer, Niels; Heinemann, Axel; Tse, Rexson; Zwirner, Johann; Henkelmann, Jeanette; Fakler, Johannes; Ondruschka, Benjamin.

In: J FORENSIC SCI, Vol. 66, No. 3, 05.2021, p. 919-925.

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@article{741356daae384dfdb696db2d52492164,
title = "A comparison on the detection accuracy of ante mortem computed tomography vs. autopsy for the diagnosis of pelvic ring injury in legal medicine",
abstract = "A detailed knowledge on the exact morphology of pelvic injuries provided crucial information in understanding the mechanisms of injury and has influence on the natural course and subsequent mortality. However, forensic medical literature investigating pelvic fractures in detail is scarce to date. This case series aims to compare the accuracy in detecting pelvic injuries using autopsy and ante mortem computed tomography (CT). Nineteen deceased patients with CT scans of pelvic fractures were included retrospectively. Pelvic injuries were independently assessed by a board-certified radiologist (R) and a board-certified trauma surgeon (T), both using the ante mortem CT scans, and by a board-certified forensic pathologist using autopsy (A) results without knowledge of the CT scan findings. No patient had died causatively from a pelvic fracture. Most injuries of the pelvis were present in the pubic rami (16/18) and sacral bone (13/18), followed by the sacroiliac joint (9/18) and iliac bone fractures (8/18). Ilium fractures (A:100%;R:67%;T:67%) and injuries of the sacroiliac joint (A:83%;R:50%;T:42%) were best detected via autopsy. The diagnosis of sacral fractures (A:19%;R:94%;T:88%) and fractures of the pubic rami (A:67%;R:96%;T:96%) were most often missed in autopsy. The results show deficits in the assessment of the pelvic injury for both CT and autopsy. Autopsy was superior in detecting injuries of the sacroiliac joint, but inferior in detecting sacral and pubic bone fractures. For an encompassing evaluation of ligamento-skeletal pelvic injuries, the complementary use of both CT and autopsy is recommended.",
author = "Andreas H{\"o}ch and Orkun {\"O}zkurtul and Niels Hammer and Axel Heinemann and Rexson Tse and Johann Zwirner and Jeanette Henkelmann and Johannes Fakler and Benjamin Ondruschka",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2021 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.",
year = "2021",
month = may,
doi = "10.1111/1556-4029.14677",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "919--925",
journal = "J FORENSIC SCI",
issn = "0022-1198",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparison on the detection accuracy of ante mortem computed tomography vs. autopsy for the diagnosis of pelvic ring injury in legal medicine

AU - Höch, Andreas

AU - Özkurtul, Orkun

AU - Hammer, Niels

AU - Heinemann, Axel

AU - Tse, Rexson

AU - Zwirner, Johann

AU - Henkelmann, Jeanette

AU - Fakler, Johannes

AU - Ondruschka, Benjamin

N1 - © 2021 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.

PY - 2021/5

Y1 - 2021/5

N2 - A detailed knowledge on the exact morphology of pelvic injuries provided crucial information in understanding the mechanisms of injury and has influence on the natural course and subsequent mortality. However, forensic medical literature investigating pelvic fractures in detail is scarce to date. This case series aims to compare the accuracy in detecting pelvic injuries using autopsy and ante mortem computed tomography (CT). Nineteen deceased patients with CT scans of pelvic fractures were included retrospectively. Pelvic injuries were independently assessed by a board-certified radiologist (R) and a board-certified trauma surgeon (T), both using the ante mortem CT scans, and by a board-certified forensic pathologist using autopsy (A) results without knowledge of the CT scan findings. No patient had died causatively from a pelvic fracture. Most injuries of the pelvis were present in the pubic rami (16/18) and sacral bone (13/18), followed by the sacroiliac joint (9/18) and iliac bone fractures (8/18). Ilium fractures (A:100%;R:67%;T:67%) and injuries of the sacroiliac joint (A:83%;R:50%;T:42%) were best detected via autopsy. The diagnosis of sacral fractures (A:19%;R:94%;T:88%) and fractures of the pubic rami (A:67%;R:96%;T:96%) were most often missed in autopsy. The results show deficits in the assessment of the pelvic injury for both CT and autopsy. Autopsy was superior in detecting injuries of the sacroiliac joint, but inferior in detecting sacral and pubic bone fractures. For an encompassing evaluation of ligamento-skeletal pelvic injuries, the complementary use of both CT and autopsy is recommended.

AB - A detailed knowledge on the exact morphology of pelvic injuries provided crucial information in understanding the mechanisms of injury and has influence on the natural course and subsequent mortality. However, forensic medical literature investigating pelvic fractures in detail is scarce to date. This case series aims to compare the accuracy in detecting pelvic injuries using autopsy and ante mortem computed tomography (CT). Nineteen deceased patients with CT scans of pelvic fractures were included retrospectively. Pelvic injuries were independently assessed by a board-certified radiologist (R) and a board-certified trauma surgeon (T), both using the ante mortem CT scans, and by a board-certified forensic pathologist using autopsy (A) results without knowledge of the CT scan findings. No patient had died causatively from a pelvic fracture. Most injuries of the pelvis were present in the pubic rami (16/18) and sacral bone (13/18), followed by the sacroiliac joint (9/18) and iliac bone fractures (8/18). Ilium fractures (A:100%;R:67%;T:67%) and injuries of the sacroiliac joint (A:83%;R:50%;T:42%) were best detected via autopsy. The diagnosis of sacral fractures (A:19%;R:94%;T:88%) and fractures of the pubic rami (A:67%;R:96%;T:96%) were most often missed in autopsy. The results show deficits in the assessment of the pelvic injury for both CT and autopsy. Autopsy was superior in detecting injuries of the sacroiliac joint, but inferior in detecting sacral and pubic bone fractures. For an encompassing evaluation of ligamento-skeletal pelvic injuries, the complementary use of both CT and autopsy is recommended.

U2 - 10.1111/1556-4029.14677

DO - 10.1111/1556-4029.14677

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 33512022

VL - 66

SP - 919

EP - 925

JO - J FORENSIC SCI

JF - J FORENSIC SCI

SN - 0022-1198

IS - 3

ER -