109 results on '"Piercecchi-Marti MD"'
Search Results
2. Post-mortem transmission risk of infectious disease: A systematic review.
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Geoffray L, Tuchtan L, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Delteil C
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- Humans, Communicable Diseases transmission, Prion Diseases transmission, Hepatitis B transmission, Hepatitis C transmission, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, HIV Infections transmission, Tuberculosis transmission, COVID-19 transmission, Autopsy, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification
- Abstract
Introduction: Autopsies may expose to infectious risks. The objective of this study is to assess the risk of post-mortem transmission of HIV, HBV, HCV, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MBT), SARS-CoV2 and prion in the workplace and to estimate the duration of their infectiousness., Material and Method: the PRISMA 2020 guideline was used. Pubmed, Web of Science, Google Scholar and Sciencedirect databases were assessed until February 28, 2023. We searched for articles in any language and any date of publication. Studies involving animals, transmission between two living people or transmission outside the workplace were excluded. Risk of bias was assessed using the appropriate assessment tools for each type of study. A descriptive analysis was performed., Results: A total of 46 studies were included. Cases of post-mortem transmission were certain for HIV (n = 1) and MBT (n = 18). The longest post-mortem interval for positive diagnostic tests was 17 days for HIV, 60 for HBV, 7 for HCV, 36 for MBT and 17 for SARS-CoV2. The longest post-mortem interval for positive cultures was 21 h for HIV, 6 days for HBV, 36 days for MBT, 17 days for SARS-CoV2. The methodology of the studies was heterogeneous, some of them associated with a high risk of bias., Conclusion: There is a lack of consistent data in the literature concerning the infectivity of cadavers, except for MBT. Legislation appears to be based on minimizing contact between the biological agent and the professional. In the absence of recent robust scientific data, workers should systematically follow the best practice recommendations., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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3. Traumatic axonal injury: Clinic, forensic and biomechanics perspectives.
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Delteil C, Manlius T, Bailly N, Godio-Raboutet Y, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Tuchtan L, Hak JF, Velly L, Simeone P, and Thollon L
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- Humans, Biomechanical Phenomena, Finite Element Analysis, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Forensic Pathology methods, Axons pathology, Axons physiology, Forensic Medicine methods, Diffuse Axonal Injury diagnostic imaging, Diffuse Axonal Injury physiopathology, Diffuse Axonal Injury pathology
- Abstract
Identification of Traumatic axonal injury (TAI) is critical in clinical practice, particularly in terms of long-term prognosis, but also for medico-legal issues, to verify whether the death or the after-effects were attributable to trauma. Multidisciplinary approaches are an undeniable asset when it comes to solving these problems. The aim of this work is therefore to list the different techniques needed to identify axonal lesions and to understand the lesion mechanisms involved in their formation. Imaging can be used to assess the consequences of trauma, to identify indirect signs of TAI, to explain the patient's initial symptoms and even to assess the patient's prognosis. Three-dimensional reconstructions of the skull can highlight fractures suggestive of trauma. Microscopic and immunohistochemical techniques are currently considered as the most reliable tools for the early identification of TAI following trauma. Finite element models use mechanical equations to predict biomechanical parameters, such as tissue stresses and strains in the brain, when subjected to external forces, such as violent impacts to the head. These parameters, which are difficult to measure experimentally, are then used to predict the risk of injury. The integration of imaging data with finite element models allows researchers to create realistic and personalized computational models by incorporating actual geometry and properties obtained from imaging techniques. The personalization of these models makes their forensic approach particularly interesting., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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4. Resuscitation and Forensic Factors Influencing Outcome in Penetrating Cardiac Injury.
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Aumaitre A, Delteil C, Tuchtan L, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Gainnier M, Carvelli J, Boussen S, Bruder N, Heireche F, Florant T, Gaillat F, Lagier D, Porto A, Velly L, and Simeone P
- Abstract
Background: Cardiac injury caused by a sharp object is a medical and surgical therapeutic challenge. Mortality risk factors have been identified but there are major discrepancies in the literature. The aim of this study was to analyse the management of victims of penetrating cardiac injuries before and after admission to hospital and the anatomical characteristics of these injuries in order to facilitate diagnosis of the most critical patients., Methods: To carry out this study, we conducted a retrospective analytical study with epidemiological data on victims of penetrating cardiac injuries. We included two types of patients, with those who underwent autopsy in our institution after death from sharp injury to the heart or great vessels and those who survived with treatment in the emergency department or intensive care unit between January 2015 and February 2022., Results: We included 30 autopsied patients and 12 survivors aged between 18 and 73 years. Higher mortality was associated with prehospital or in-hospital cardiorespiratory arrest (OR = 4, CI [1.71-9.35]), preoperative mechanical ventilation (OR = 10, CI [1.53-65.41]), preoperative catecholamines (OR = 7, CI [1.12-6.29]), preoperative and perioperative adrenaline (OR = 13, CI [1.98-85.46] and [1.98-85.46]), penetrating cardiac injury (OR = 14, CI [2.10-93.22]), multiple cardiac injuries (OR = 1.5, CI [1.05-2.22]) and an Organ Injury Scaling of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (AAST-OIS) score of 5 (OR = 2.9, CI [1.04-8.54]; p = 0.0329) with an AUC-ROC curve value of 0.708 (CI [0.543-0.841])., Conclusions: This study identified risk mortality factors in penetrating cardiac injury patients. These findings can help improve the diagnosis and management of these patients. The AAST-OIS score may be a good tool to diagnose critical patients., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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5. Erratum to "Sudden death after facial impacts: Is the brainstem involved?" [Morphologie 106 (2022) 217-223].
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Tuchtan L, Delteil C, Godio-Raboutet Y, Kollop M, Léonetti G, Thollon L, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
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- 2024
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6. Head injury: Importance of the deep brain nuclei in force transmission to the brain.
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Delteil C, Manlius T, Marle O, Godio-Raboutet Y, Bailly N, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Tuchtan L, and Thollon L
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- Humans, Head, Brain, Biomechanical Phenomena, Finite Element Analysis, Gray Matter, Craniocerebral Trauma
- Abstract
Finite element modeling provides a digital representation of the human body. It is currently the most pertinent method to study the mechanisms of head injury, and is becoming a scientific reference in forensic expert reports. Improved biofidelity is a recurrent aim of research studies in biomechanics in order to improve earlier models whose mechanical properties conformed to simplified elastic behavior and mechanic laws. We aimed to study force transmission to the brain following impacts to the head, using a finite element head model with increased biofidelity. To the model developed by the Laboratory of Applied Biomechanics of Marseille, we added new brain structures (thalamus, central gray nuclei and ventricular systems) as well as three tracts involved in the symptoms of head injury: the corpus callosum, uncinate tracts and corticospinal tracts. Three head impact scenarios were simulated: an uppercut with the prior model and an uppercut with the improved model in order to compare the two models, and a lateral impact with an impact velocity of 6.5 m/s in the improved model. In these conditions, in uppercuts the maximum stress values did not exceed the injury risk threshold. On the other hand, the deep gray matter (thalamus and central gray nuclei) was the region at highest risk of injury during lateral impacts. Even if injury to the deep gray matter is not immediately life-threatening, it could explain the chronic disabling symptoms of even low-intensity head injury., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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7. [How do you estimate the loss of chance associated with the Covid-19 pandemic?]
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Maroun F, Delteil C, Bartoli C, Tuchtan-Torrents L, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
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- Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Probability, Physical Therapy Modalities, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Les auteurs déclarent n’avoir aucun lien d’intérêts.
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- 2024
8. Fetal facial bone growth: Post-mortem CT analysis.
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Lesieur E, Delteil C, Gorincour G, Panuel M, Chaumoitre K, Saliba B, Bretelle F, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Adalian P
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- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Autopsy, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Maxilla diagnostic imaging, Gestational Age, Ultrasonography, Prenatal methods, Face diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: To describe and model the normal growth of fetal facial bones and angles., Material and Methods: A total of 118 fetal CT scans obtained at 19 to 41 weeks gestation after in utero fetal death or late miscarriage were analyzed. CT scan was followed by autopsy and pathological examination and only fetuses free from brain disease or abnormal craniofacial development were included. The measurements were taken using software for frontal, sagittal and 3D reconstruction from native axial sections. The optimal plane for bone analysis was chosen and the measurements made by multiplanar reconstruction., Results: There was a statistically significant increase (P<0.001) in all measurements regardless of gestational age (GA) except those of the mandibulo-fronto-maxillary angle (P=0.412), the naso-mandibulo-maxillary angle (P=0.828) and mandibular width (P=0.86). There was no significant difference according to fetal sex. Based on these results, the corresponding growth curves were created. The anteroposterior mandibular diameter (APD) was very strongly correlated with GA (R=0.926, P<0.001). The following equation: GA=(8.187×APD)+4.257 can be used to estimate GA with a confidence interval (CI) of±2.42. The same applies to maxillary width (MW) (R=0.922; P<0.001). The equation GA=(11.059×MW)+7.571 can be used to estimate GA with a CI of 2.17., Conclusion: The growth of the mandible, maxilla, zygomatic bone and orbits was measured and the corresponding growth curves were established. Several measurements were strongly correlated with gestational age., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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9. [Diagnosis of a rare and severe inflammatory bowel disease in an infant with peri-orificial ulcerations].
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Bardet A, Riccardi F, Torrents J, Capasso F, Devooght MA, Buffat C, Fabre A, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Delteil C
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- Age of Onset, Humans, Infant, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases complications, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
We report the case of an infant aged 8 and a half months, who had an apparent life-threatening event and died despite optimal resuscitation management. The medical history was marked by mild symptoms, mainly feeding difficulties and progressively settling skin lesions. Parents were related (first cousins) and the patient had two healthy older sisters. Autopsy showed growth delay, symmetrical erythematous and ulcerated periorificial lesions associated with punctiform erythematous lesions of the face and alopecia. Microscopic examination revealed deep bronchial inhalation with the onset of infectious pneumopathy, major inflammatory ulceration of the gastrointestinal tract, hepatic steatosis, brain stem and pancreas abnormalities. We conclude that the cause of death was a multi-visceral failure with inhalation pneumopathy, in a context of very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD). Genetic consultation, into a rare disease reference center, allowed to orient the analysis, to identify a homozygous pathogenic variant in the IL10RA gene, confirming the diagnostic of an autosomal recessive very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (inflammatory bowel disease 28, early-onset, autosomal recessive, #613148)., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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10. Sudden death after facial impacts: Is the brainstem involved?
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Tuchtan L, Delteil C, Godio-Raboutet Y, Kolopp M, Léonetti G, Thollon L, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
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- Autopsy, Brain Stem, Humans, Death, Sudden etiology, Face
- Abstract
Three deaths following facial impacts in the presence of witnesses and resulting in brain lesions that were visualized only on pathological examination were studied at the forensic medicine institute of Marseille. Craniofacial impacts, even of low intensity, received during brawls may be associated with brain lesions ranging from a simple knock-out to fatal injuries. In criminal cases that are brought to court, even by autopsy it is still difficult to establish a direct link between the violence of the impact and the injuries that resulted in death. During a facial impact, the head undergoes a movement of violent forced hyperextension. Death may thus be secondary to the transmission of forces to the brain, either by a mechanism involving nerve conduction that may be termed a reflex mechanism (for example by vagal hyperstimulation) or by injury to the central nervous system (axonal damage). In such situations, autopsy does not make it possible to determine the cause of death, but only to suspect it in a context of voluntary violence in the presence of witnesses, with or without violent injury observed on external examination or on superficial incisions to determine the extent of bruises or hematoma. Systemic and comprehensive investigation involving pathology and toxicology is essential in any medicolegal case for positive interpretation and discrimination of other causes of death., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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11. [Loss of chance in compensation for non-accidental bodily injury: inventory].
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Maroun F, Delteil C, Bartoli C, Tuchtan-Torrents L, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
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- Humans, Probability
- Abstract
Loss of chance in compensation for non-accidental bodily injury: inventory The main problem with this notion is the hypothetical nature of the loss of chance, insofar as it is impossible to take for sure if the hoped-for event would actually haved occurred. This this is the main difficulty encountered when estimating a loss of chance. The aim of this work is to identify a number of tools that will serve as a basis for the assessment of loss of chance damage. The contribution of data from the literature, the use of abacuses depending on the terrain and the pathology and the contribution of sapients will be described. The calculation methodology will also be discussed in the context of the cumulative loss of chances suffered by the patient., Competing Interests: Les auteurs déclarent n’avoir aucun lien d’intérêts.
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- 2022
12. Judicial handling of cases of non-accidental head trauma in infants: Review and analysis of expert assessments.
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Delteil C, Tuchtan L, Scavarda D, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Bosdure E, and Borrione C
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- Child, Humans, Infant, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Child Abuse diagnosis, Craniocerebral Trauma diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: Good practice guidelines help clinicians to establish a suspected diagnosis of non-accidental head injury (NAHI) and help forensic experts to establish a level of certainty for the diagnosis. The objective of this study was to assess how the French Health Authority (HAS) guidelines contribute to the process of producing an expert assessment, on causation and certainty in cases of suspected NAHI., Method: A retrospective study was conducted of the expert assessments that were conducted by a paediatric surgeon and forensic expert attached to our local court between 2002 and 2018, with the aim of determining the causal mechanism of the lesions and express a degree of certainty regarding the diagnosis., Results: In our study, we found that, despite the HAS guidelines, a number of documents deemed essential for the forensic expert were sometimes missing, and that, by applying these guidelines, the decisions reached in some expert assessments could been reclassified and certain factors formerly described as risk factors for injury could be excluded. A precise dating of the traumatic event was proposed in half of cases., Conclusion: Our study highlights the vital role of the HAS guidelines, not only for patient management but also to ensure high-quality expert assessments. Unfortunately, guidelines were not yet being properly adhered to by medical teams., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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13. Cyclosporin A: A Repurposable Drug in the Treatment of COVID-19?
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Devaux CA, Melenotte C, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Delteil C, and Raoult D
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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is now at the forefront of major health challenge faced globally, creating an urgent need for safe and efficient therapeutic strategies. Given the high attrition rates, high costs, and quite slow development of drug discovery, repurposing of known FDA-approved molecules is increasingly becoming an attractive issue in order to quickly find molecules capable of preventing and/or curing COVID-19 patients. Cyclosporin A (CsA), a common anti-rejection drug widely used in transplantation, has recently been shown to exhibit substantial anti-SARS-CoV-2 antiviral activity and anti-COVID-19 effect. Here, we review the molecular mechanisms of action of CsA in order to highlight why this molecule seems to be an interesting candidate for the therapeutic management of COVID-19 patients. We conclude that CsA could have at least three major targets in COVID-19 patients: (i) an anti-inflammatory effect reducing the production of proinflammatory cytokines, (ii) an antiviral effect preventing the formation of the viral RNA synthesis complex, and (iii) an effect on tissue damage and thrombosis by acting against the deleterious action of angiotensin II. Several preliminary CsA clinical trials performed on COVID-19 patients report lower incidence of death and suggest that this strategy should be investigated further in order to assess in which context the benefit/risk ratio of repurposing CsA as first-line therapy in COVID-19 is the most favorable., Competing Interests: CAD declares owning Sanofi and Merck shares. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Devaux, Melenotte, Piercecchi-Marti, Delteil and Raoult.)
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- 2021
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14. Homicides and suicides by firearm in Marseille: An 8-year review.
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Reynoard J, Desmarais A, Mancini J, Delteil C, Leonetti G, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Tuchtan-Torrents L
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- Forensic Medicine, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Firearms, Homicide, Suicide, Wounds, Gunshot
- Abstract
The regions of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur and Corsica in south-east France are regularly affected by firearm deaths, and a large amount of data has been collected by our forensic institute. We carried out a single-center retrospective descriptive study of the records of our institute between January 1, 2011, and 31 December, 2018, relating to firearm deaths (homicides and suicides). There were 302 cases (218 homicides and 84 suicides). The anatomic locations most frequently involved were the thorax, abdomen and head, in that order, in homicides and the head in suicides. More than 80% of the homicides in our series had more than one wound complex and nearly one in four homicides had more than 7. The weapon most frequently used in suicides was a hunting smooth bore gun, followed by the 9mm Luger and then by the .22 Long Rifle. In homicides, the caliber most frequently used was the 7.62 × 39 (29.6%), followed by the 9mm Luger (29%) and lastly by hunting calibers (27%). More than 10% of cases involved two weapons of two different calibers. Our study, which used a dual forensic and ballistic approach, was carried out in one of the most heavily populated regions of metropolitan France. We observed very few similarities with the literature regarding type of caliber and wound complexes. This may be explained, among other factors, by differences in political, societal or cultural contexts., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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15. The Role of the Adhesion Receptor CD146 and Its Soluble Form in Human Embryo Implantation and Pregnancy.
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Bouvier S, Kaspi E, Joshkon A, Paulmyer-Lacroix O, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Sharma A, Leroyer AS, Bertaud A, Gris JC, Dignat-George F, Blot-Chabaud M, and Bardin N
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- Biomarkers, CD146 Antigen analysis, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, CD146 Antigen physiology, Embryo Implantation
- Abstract
CD146 is an adhesion molecule essentially located in the vascular system, which has been described to play an important role in angiogenesis. A soluble form of CD146, called sCD146, is detected in the bloodstream and is known as an angiogenic factor. During placental development, CD146 is selectively expressed in extravillous trophoblasts. A growing body of evidence shows that CD146 and, in particular, sCD146, regulate extravillous trophoblasts migration and invasion both in vitro and in vivo . Hereby, we review expression and functions of CD146/sCD146 in the obstetrical field, mainly in pregnancy and in embryo implantation. We emphasized the relevance of quantifying sCD146 in the plasma of pregnant women or in embryo supernatant in the case of in vitro fertilization (IVF) to predict pathological pregnancy such as preeclampsia or implantation defect. This review will also shed light on some major results that led us to define CD146/sCD146 as a biomarker of placental development and paves the way toward identification of new therapeutic targets during implantation and pregnancy., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Bouvier, Kaspi, Joshkon, Paulmyer-Lacroix, Piercecchi-Marti, Sharma, Leroyer, Bertaud, Gris, Dignat-George, Blot-Chabaud and Bardin.)
- Published
- 2021
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16. Study of the growth and shape of the brain and cranial base during the first two years of life.
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Delteil C, Lesieur E, Tuchtan L, Carballeira Alvarez A, Chaumoitre K, Saliba B, Adalian P, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
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- Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Radiography, Reproducibility of Results, Brain, Skull Base
- Abstract
Ontogeny of the cranial base and the brain integrates data on growth, maturation and ontogenetic allometry of these two systems in the course of development. The aim of our work was to study the ontogeny of the cranial base and the brain in order to understand their growth dynamic and shape changes using a traditional morphometric approach in individuals with normal (non-pathological) development., Materiel and Method: Forty-seven infants having been included in the unexpected infant death french protocol were analyzed. Medical imaging (CT and MRI) exams, followed by an autopsy and pathology examination allowed us to include only infants free from brain disease or pathology affecting growth., Results: Testing of measurement reliability validated 12 distances and 3 angles as well as the positioning of the landmarks that had been used to obtain the distances and the angles. No correlation between sex and the various variables studied was found. However, a correlation was observed between these variables and age, making it possible to propose a growth curve. A medium to strong correlation was found between brain variables and the bone variables of the cranial base, underlining the parallel development of the two systems., Conclusion: Our study, carried out in a rigorously selected population of infants, presents a fundamental approach to the study of ontogenesis., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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17. Study of cerebrospinal injuries by force transmission secondary to mandibular impacts using a finite element model.
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Tuchtan L, Godio-Raboutet Y, Delteil C, Léonetti G, Piercecchi Marti MD, and Thollon L
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- Adult, Brain Injuries etiology, Finite Element Analysis, Forensic Medicine methods, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Mandibular Injuries complications, Physical Abuse, Spinal Cord Injuries etiology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Brain Injuries diagnostic imaging, Computer Simulation, Mandibular Injuries diagnostic imaging, Spinal Cord Injuries diagnostic imaging
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Brain and cervical injuries are often described after major facial impacts but rarely after low-intensity mandibular impacts. Force transmission to the brain and spinal cord from a mandibular impact such as a punch was evaluated by the creation and validation of a complete finite element model of the head and neck. Anteroposterior uppercut impacts on the jaw were associated with considerable extension and strong stresses at the junction of the brainstem and spinal cord. Hook punch impacts transmitted forces directly to the brainstem and the spinal cord without extension of the spinal cord. Deaths after this type of blow with no observed histological lesions may be related to excessive stressing of the brainstem, through which pass the sensory-motor pathways and the vagus nerve and which is the regulatory center of the major vegetative functions. Biological parameters are different in each individual, and by using digital modeling they can be modulated at will (jaw shape, dentition…) for a realistic approach to forensic applications., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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18. Biomechanical study of the thyroid cartilage: A model of bi-digital strangulation.
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Gagnon C, Boismery S, Godio-Raboutet Y, Tuchtan L, Bartoli C, Adalian P, Chaumoitre K, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Thollon L
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- Decision Trees, Female, Finite Element Analysis, Forensic Medicine, Fractures, Cartilage physiopathology, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Neck Injuries physiopathology, Principal Component Analysis, Sex Characteristics, Thyroid Cartilage physiopathology, Asphyxia physiopathology, Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Computer Simulation, Neck Injuries prevention & control, Thyroid Cartilage diagnostic imaging, Thyroid Cartilage injuries
- Abstract
The presence of fracture on neck elements is an indication of violence. Both the hyoid bone and the larynx can be damaged by a strangulation mechanism. Thyroid cartilage, more specifically, may present lesions in response to this mechanical stress. These lesions result in fractures at the bases of the horns of the thyroid cartilage. This study focuses on the thyroid cartilage behavior in cases of bi-digital strangulation, using an anthropometric and biomechanical approach. To develop a biomechanical model, we performed an anthropometric study taking into account 14 distances measurements as well as 3 measurements of angles. These measures allowed us to determine a significant sexual dimorphism between individuals. Then, we define 6 morphologies models, composed of 3 females and 3 males individuals. In order to visualize the ossification of the cartilage, each model has been tested with bone properties. Strangulation cases were simulated by applying an imposed velocity of 0.4m/s then 1m/s. We observed different behaviors of the thyroid cartilage according to the sex and the morphology., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2019
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19. Sudden unexpected infant death characteristics in the French region of West Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.
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Tuchtan L, Delteil C, Levrat F, Bacquet J, Garcia P, Fayol L, Gorincour G, Zandotti C, Girard N, Drancourt M, Léonetti G, Piercecchi Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Female, France epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Retrospective Studies, Sex Factors, Sudden Infant Death epidemiology, Sudden Infant Death etiology
- Abstract
Background : Although the incidence of sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) has decreased since the 'Back to Sleep' campaign in English-speaking countries and other preventive campaigns, the circumstances of such deaths remain unclear. Aim : To analyse infant deaths recorded at the referral centre for sudden infant death of the West Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region of France (West PACA) and the forensic medicine department of Marseille University Hospital. Methods : Information on all SUID cases from 2000 to 2017 was extracted from the referral centre for sudden infant deaths in West PACA and the forensic medicine department of Marseille. Results : The study included 130 infants over the 17 years with a very similar distribution. There was a marked male preponderance, with 61.6% of boys whatever the age at death (sex ratio 1.6). Half of the deaths occurred in the first 6 months of life and the majority (61%) of infants died during autumn and winter. Nearly one-third (33.2%) had presented with minor infections and 21% had been seen by a doctor or had been admitted to hospital. Most deaths (86.4%) occurred during sleep (night or day). Nearly half of the infants (47.7%) were discovered in a prone position. A large majority of parents (90.7%) agreed to a post-mortem examination. Only 6.2% of deaths led to legal proceedings. Nearly 16.9% remained unexplained after compiling all the data included in the protocol and 9.2% remained unexplained because of incomplete investigation, including refusal of post-mortem examination. Abuse was involved in 2.3% of cases. Conclusions : Asymptomatic infectious conditions were associated with a high proportion of SUID cases. Non-supine sleep positions were still practised. There is a need to increase SUID prevention campaigns. Abbreviations : HAS, Haute Autorité de Santé: French National Health Authority; NICHD, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; PACA, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region of France; SUID, sudden unexpected infant death; SIDS, sudden infant death syndrome; CépiDc, Centre d'Epidémiologie sur les Causes Médicales de Décès/Center for Epidemiology on the Medical Causes of Death.
- Published
- 2019
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20. Folie à deux and homicide: Literature review and study of a complex clinical case.
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Guivarch J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Poinso F
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- Expert Testimony, Female, Forensic Psychiatry, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Shared Paranoid Disorder epidemiology, Suicide, Criminals psychology, Delusions psychology, Homicide psychology, Shared Paranoid Disorder psychology
- Abstract
Folie à deux is a psychiatric illness involved in homicides., Objective: To study the mechanisms leading to homicide and determine homicide risk factors in folie à deux patients through a literature review and the study of a complex clinical case., Materials and Methods: We included articles available on PubMed, ScienceDirect or Cairn that address the forensic implications of folie à deux. Then, we analyzed the criminal psychiatric assessments of two murderers (husband and wife) of a child in a case of folie à deux., Results: Seventeen articles were included. In the cases examined, homicides were committed with great violence, usually against a victim in the family circle, and were sometimes followed by suicide. The main risk factor for homicide was the combination of mystical and persecutory delusions. The homicides occurred in response to destabilization of the delusional dyads. Concerning the clinical case, we described the circumstances surrounding the killing and analyzed the four expert reports that permit us to infer the occurrence of induced psychosis, which is a form of folie à deux., Discussion: Psychiatrists must attain a better knowledge of folie à deux to allow early identification of risk situations and to improve their assessments., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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21. Tangential cranial ballistic impact: An illustration of the limitations of post-mortem CT scan?
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Delteil C, Gach P, Ben Nejma N, Capasso F, Perich P, Massiani P, Gorincour G, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Tuchtan L
- Subjects
- Forensic Ballistics, Forensic Pathology, Homicide, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Autopsy methods, Skull injuries, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Wounds, Gunshot
- Abstract
Post-mortem imaging has become more frequently used in forensic procedures, notably in a ballistic context. Despite many advances in this field, the interpretation of computed tomography (CT) can be a very complex matter. Our case illustrates the difficulties of interpretation after quasi-tangential cranial ballistic impact and keyhole wounds. These wounds are difficult to visualize on CT and are among the factors complicating the precise determination of ballistics. These sources of error remind us that CT findings must be interpreted in close comparison with autopsy findings., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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22. [Neuropathology of sudden infant death syndrome: Review of the literature and proposal of a protocol for neuropathological examination].
- Author
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Delteil C, Meyronet D, Maues de Paula A, Jouvet A, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Brain Injuries, Diffuse pathology, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnosis, Brain Injuries, Traumatic pathology, Cause of Death, Databases, Factual, Diagnosis, Differential, France, Humans, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain diagnosis, Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain pathology, Infant, Sudden Infant Death diagnosis, Sudden Infant Death epidemiology, Sudden Infant Death etiology, Autopsy methods, Brain pathology, Sudden Infant Death pathology
- Abstract
According to the French High Authority for Health, sudden unexpected death in infants (SUDI) is defined as "a sudden death that occurs in an infant, whereas nothing in its known history could have predicted it". This is an exclusion diagnosis. There are great interregional disparities despite the professional recommendations established in February 2007. For the examination of the brain, instructions are not adapted to current and research practice. The role of the pathologist, like anyone involved in SUDI, is to eliminate an abuse head trauma and to determine the cause of death. Major neuropathological lesions by definition do not exist. Lesions of hypoxia/ischemia are the most frequent but not specific. The accessibility of anti-APP immunoblotting has highlighted the role of anoxia in the development of axonal diffuse damages. Many studies are looking for a neurological substratum of the SUDI (neuropathological and/or neurobiochinic). This article aims to define a detailed sampling protocol based on foreign consensus and current data of science in order to assist pathologists and to promote a homogeneous data bank in France., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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23. Pediatric medicolegal autopsy in France: A forensic histopathological approach.
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Delteil C, Tuchtan L, Torrents J, Capuani C, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Accidents mortality, Child, Child Abuse mortality, Child, Preschool, Female, France, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Retrospective Studies, Autopsy, Cause of Death, Forensic Pathology
- Abstract
The aim of postmortem medicolegal examination in pediatric death is primarily to establish the circumstances and causes of death and to exclude child abuse. In France, pediatric death is systematically documented by medicolegal or medical autopsy. In case of medicolegal autopsy, the complementary examinations, requested and financed by justice, are rarely limited to a histopathological examination. However in medical autopsies other tools are available to the pathologist as toxicology, biochemistry and molecular biology. The purpose of this article is to evaluate the efficacy of forensic histopathology in pediatric forensic autopsies. We analyze the main causes of pediatric death in a forensic context. Between 2004 and 2015, 157 infant deaths were identified in Marseille university hospital. The forensic histopathology and autopsy reports of all 157 cases were available for systematic review. Medical or surgical causes represented 41,3% of deaths in our center, accidental causes 8.1% and child abuse 28,8%. The definitive diagnosis was made at autopsy in 30% of cases and at histopathological examination in 70% highlighting that forensic histopathology is an indispensable tool in pediatric medicolegal autopsies. Significant histological abnormalities may be detected in selected organs such as the brain, lungs, heart, liver, adrenal glands and kidneys in spite of macroscopically normal appearances. This justifies systematic sampling of all organs. Despite the implementation of the French sudden infant death protocol which recommends medical autopsies, too many pediatric autopsies are carried out in a medicolegal context. 30% of the cases remain without diagnosis at the end of the autopsy and histological examination. This number could be reduced by the contribution of others laboratory investigation., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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24. Death From Butane Inhalation Abuse in Teenagers: Two New Case Studies and Review of the Literature.
- Author
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Alunni V, Gaillard Y, Castier F, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Quatrehomme G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Butanes analysis, Child, Cyclohexenes analysis, Gastrointestinal Contents chemistry, Humans, Limonene, Lung chemistry, Male, Siloxanes analysis, Terpenes analysis, Butanes poisoning, Inhalant Abuse
- Abstract
The ready availability of butane makes butane abuse frequent. Fatalities are rare. This study presents two cases of death by butane overdose. The postmortem analyses were carried out using headspace gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. It revealed femoral blood butane concentrations of 18 and 22 mg/L, respectively, as well as specific combinations of adjuvants in each victim. In one of the victims, brain and fatty tissue also contained butane, pointing to chronic consumption. The originality of this study is to show that the identification of specific combinations of adjuvants can be helpful for identifying the brand of deodorant used. Also, sampling the skin and mucosa can help identify the method of drug delivery. The histological examination documented both the direct toxic effect of the gas on the respiratory mucosa and signs of chronic abuse. Volatile substance intoxications should be systematically considered in case of sudden death in a teenager., (© 2017 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
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- 2018
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25. Combined use of postmortem 3D computed tomography reconstructions and 3D-design software for postmortem ballistic analysis.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Gorincour G, Kolopp M, Massiani P, Léonetti G, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Humans, Forensic Ballistics methods, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Software, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Wounds, Gunshot diagnostic imaging
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
26. Coexistence of Subdural Hematoma and a Rare Cardiopathy in an Infant: Etiological and French Medicolegal Discussion.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Lebreton-Chakour C, Tosello B, Oger M, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Cardiomyopathies diagnosis, Child Abuse, Female, France, Humans, Hypertelorism, Infant, Microcephaly, Cardiomyopathies congenital, Forensic Pathology, Hematoma, Subdural pathology, Myocardium pathology
- Abstract
During legal proceedings following the unexpected death of an infant, the magistrate calls on an expert to clarify the causes of death and to decide on the course to be taken. A report was made following the death of a 7-month-old baby girl after recovery from cardiac arrest when investigations of the cause revealed a subdural hematoma (SDH). We discuss the interconnection of these two entities and their role in the lethal process. In this infant, two distinct lesions with medicolegal implications were simultaneously present: on the one hand histiocytoid cardiopathy, and on the other hand SDH, which could result from ill-treatment. The case of this infant reminds us that the role of the pediatrician is to report the suspicion, whereas the role of the medical expert is to inform the magistrate as to the reality of abuse and its implication in the lethal process., (© 2017 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
- Published
- 2017
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27. Medicolegal Implications of Nosocomial Infections: A Case Report of Aspergillus Contamination during Cardiac Surgery.
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Tuchtan L, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Dumon H, Métras D, Léonetti G, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aortic Valve surgery, Brain pathology, Compensation and Redress legislation & jurisprudence, France, Humans, Immunocompetence, Male, Malpractice legislation & jurisprudence, Multiple Organ Failure etiology, Sepsis microbiology, Aspergillosis complications, Brain microbiology, Cross Infection microbiology, Heart Valve Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Prosthesis-Related Infections microbiology
- Abstract
Nosocomial infections have become a major issue of public health and lead to an increasing number of suits for damages. We present a rare case of Aspergillus contamination during cardiac surgery, describe the medicolegal investigation, and present the new system for compensation of bodily injury after nosocomial infection in France, based on the law of March 4, 2002 on patient rights and quality in the health system. This case demonstrates the limits of compensation for nosocomial infections on the grounds of national solidarity. The expert report requested by the regional commission for conciliation and compensation is of fundamental importance in enabling the commission to decide between fault and inherent risk of treatment., (© 2016 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
- Published
- 2017
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28. [Sudden death of a young man as late sequelae complicating a pediatric disease: About a case].
- Author
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Pierry C, Franchet C, Tuchtan-Torrents L, Macon C, Torrents J, Capuani C, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Death, Sudden, Cardiac etiology, Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome complications
- Abstract
In France, sudden death is responsible every year for 40,000 deaths. The most frequent etiology is cardiac disease. Atheromatous-related pathology is the most common etiology beyond 35, but cardiomyopathies and channelopathies are responsible for a significant number of deaths in young adults. Some acquired disorders can also cause sudden cardiac death. We report the case of a 17-year-old man who died suddenly after sport. Autopsy and pathological study found multiple giant coronary aneurysms. Thrombosis and fibrous scar of myocardial ischemic events were observed. These lesions were in favor of late sequelae of Kawasaki disease. Kawasaki disease is a rare but not exceptional cause of sudden cardiac death in young adults. In the lack of known clinical history, some aspects, even not specific, should evoke this diagnosis. Even in front of apparent good clinical tolerance, these sequelae require appropriate follow-up because of a significant risk of sudden death., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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29. Is the French criminal psychiatric assessment in crisis?
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Guivarch J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Glezer D, Murdymootoo V, Chabannes JM, and Poinso F
- Subjects
- Crime legislation & jurisprudence, Crime psychology, Expert Testimony legislation & jurisprudence, France, Humans, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Psychiatry legislation & jurisprudence, Psychiatry organization & administration, Forensic Psychiatry legislation & jurisprudence, Forensic Psychiatry organization & administration
- Abstract
The criminal psychiatric assessment in France seems to be facing growing criticism related to disagreements between experts and, on the other hand, a lack of interest of psychiatrists for the assessment. We start by explaining the current framework of the criminal psychiatric assessment in France, which differs from the assessment used in English-speaking countries, where Roman law applies. Then, we will describe the disagreements through a literature review and two clinical vignettes. Finally, we will try to understand the causes of discrepancies between experts and the reasons for a supposed lack of interest of the psychiatrists for the expertise. For this, we conducted a survey among the psychiatric experts. We individually questioned experts on the discrepancies and on their awareness of the expertise. We found that 75% of the experts we surveyed had already faced the divergent opinion of a colleague. In addition, the experts were divided on their conclusions related to the fictional scenario we gave them for an a priori assessment (a person with schizophrenia who was accused of murder), particularly in the specific contexts that we submitted to them. The main cause of disagreement between experts was the various schools of thought that influence the psychiatric experts in the forensic discussion and, therefore, the conclusions of a case. Moreover, the experts believed that the decrease in the number of psychiatric experts could be attributed to the adverse financial situation of the assessment, the considerable workload required, and the extensive responsibility that falls on the expert. Calling on a team of forensic experts to perform assessments seems to be the first solution to this crisis. Furthermore, if the experts were better compensated for the assessments, more people would want to undertake this work., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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30. Anatomical basis of the coordination between smooth and striated urethral and anal sphincters: loops of regulation between inferior hypogastric plexus and pudendal nerve. Immuno-histological study with 3D reconstruction.
- Author
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Bertrand MM, Alsaid B, Droupy S, Ripoche J, Benoit G, Adalian P, Brunet C, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Prudhomme M
- Subjects
- Anal Canal innervation, Efferent Pathways anatomy & histology, Female, Fetus anatomy & histology, Humans, Hypogastric Plexus embryology, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Pudendal Nerve anatomy & histology, Urethra innervation, Anal Canal embryology, Urethra embryology
- Abstract
Purpose: (1) Describe both nervous pathways to the sphincters, and highlight the anatomical support of their coordination. (2) Obtain a 3D representation of this complex innervation system., Methods: A computer-assisted anatomical dissection technique was used. Serial histological sections were cut in the pelvis of four female human foetuses (aged 19-32 weeks of gestation). The sections were treated with conventional staining, and with seven different immunostainings. The sections were digitalized and, finally, a 3D representation was built from the corresponding images., Results: Myelinated and sensory fibres were detected at the inferior hypogastric plexus (IHP) level. Our analysis showed that most of the afferent sensory fibres come from the urinary and anal sphincters through the anterior and posterior branches of the IHP respectively. A highly positive nitrergic (anti-NOS1) and sensitive (anti-CGRP) labelling was found in the external layer of the urethral sphincter. The 3D representation allowed describing the two components of the innervation system. A sensory-motor regulation loop was found for both sphincters., Conclusion: A 3D description of the components of both nervous pathways to the sphincters has been established. Our findings on the innervation of the sphincters tend to question the classical infra/supra levatorian muscle description. The coordinated work of the internal and external layers of the anal and urethral sphincter is probably mediated by multiple roles regulation.
- Published
- 2016
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31. [Differences in psychiatric expertise of responsibility for schizophrenic persons accused of murder: Study with experts of the Court of Appeal of Aix-en-Provence].
- Author
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Guivarch J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Glezer D, and Chabannes JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders, Dangerous Behavior, Female, France, Humans, Liability, Legal, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Compliance, Psychiatry, Surveys and Questionnaires, Expert Testimony legislation & jurisprudence, Forensic Psychiatry legislation & jurisprudence, Homicide legislation & jurisprudence, Homicide psychology, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: In France, forensic psychiatric assessment plays a central role in the relationship between psychiatry and justice. The psychiatric expert is commissioned to determine whether or not the accused has a mental disorder and to specify whether or not it affected discernment at the time of offense. Nowadays, psychiatric expertise is coming under more and more criticism, particularly regarding divergences between experts., Objectives: Our objectives were to find points of divergence between experts, try to understand causes and suggest ways to try to reduce them., Methods: For this we conducted a study, between July 2012 and January 2013, with psychiatric experts of the Court of Appeal of Aix-en-Provence through semi-structured interviews. We focused on a limited context: psychiatric expertise of responsibility for schizophrenic persons accused of murder. We questioned the experts about the issue of criminal liability of a person with schizophrenia in general but also in clinical situations we thought particularly involved in disagreements., Results: We recruited a population of 17 psychiatrists, mostly males of average age of 58 years, working mostly in the department of adult psychiatry of a hospital. We highlighted the differences between the experts, first with regards to the issue of liability in general. Experts divided seemed to keep in majority (52.9 %) the alternative between abolition and alteration of discernment when faced with a schizophrenic person accused of murder. The differences were even more pronounced in specific contexts. Thus, the fact that the person had suffered from delirium at the time of the offense led half of the experts (47.1 %) to conclude a systematic abolition of discernment, while the other half made such a conclusion when the delirium was directly linked to the facts. Discontinuation of neuroleptic treatment, drug abuse or existence of premeditation changed the conclusions of the experts in half the cases, more in the sense of an increased accountability in the cases of drug abuse or premeditation, and in the direction of a reduction of liability in case of cessation of treatment. The denial of facts by the accused caused fewer disagreements between experts. Among experts, 76.5 % had already observed differences, which, according to them, were based primarily on schools of thought, or personal views (64.7 %), which could distort clinical evaluation and especially forensic interpretation of the relationship between pathology and facts. The experts thought it was possible and desirable to reduce differences and proposed different solutions for this, especially the return to dual expertise and colleges of experts., Discussion: Our results were consistent with those in the literature. Based on proposals from experts and data from the literature, we identified five perspectives likely to reduce differences: first it would be useful to put in place a better specific training in forensic psychiatry and expertise, not only theoretical but also in terms of practical training through tutoring. We would identify a jurisprudence in forensic psychiatric assessment and identify consensual points. It would be good to allow experts to acquire sufficient experience not just through tutorials but also by statutory changes. Moments of exchange between experts - including a return to dual expertise and the organization of work meeting - could also reduce differences. Finally, we propose legislative changes: not only to rewrite the paragraph 2 of Article 122-1 of the French Penal Code, but also to give priority to the expertise of responsibility on the expertise of dangerousness., Conclusion: We showed that there were differences between the experts mainly concerned with the forensic interpretation, and that they seemed linked to schools of thought or to personal views of each expert. To reduce the differences, we discussed five perspectives., (Copyright © 2015 L’Encéphale, Paris. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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32. Rare case of eyeball rupture following oculocardiac reflex during anaesthesia.
- Author
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Tuchtan-Torrents L, Champeaux-Fesquet C, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Aged, Colonic Neoplasms surgery, Humans, Male, Rupture, Spontaneous chemically induced, Tachycardia, Sinus complications, Tachycardia, Sinus etiology, Vision Disorders etiology, Anesthesia, General, Eye Injuries etiology, Eye Injuries surgery, Reflex, Oculocardiac, Rupture, Spontaneous therapy
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Medico-legal analysis of legal complaints in bariatric surgery: a 15-year retrospective study.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Kassir R, Sastre B, Gouillat C, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Bariatric Surgery adverse effects, Delayed Diagnosis, Female, France, Humans, Male, Malpractice legislation & jurisprudence, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications etiology, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Bariatric Surgery legislation & jurisprudence, Obesity, Morbid surgery
- Abstract
Background: Bariatric surgery for severe obesity has become an effective and accepted treatment for sustained weight loss., Objectives: The aim of our study was to analyze the complications and issues raised by the experts on which jury or judges' decisions were made for the different types of bariatric surgery., Setting: University Hospital, France., Materials and Methods: We have carried out a retrospective study of 59 expert review dossiers over a period of 15 years (1999-2014) on the different types of bariatric surgery (laparoscopic adjustable gastric band [LAGB], sleeve gastrectomy [SG], Roux-en-Y gastric bypass [RYGB], vertical banded gastroplasty [VBG], and gastric plication [GP])., Results: Of the cases, 81% were women and the average age was 39 years old (range 19 to 68 years). Among the procedures giving rise to the complaints, 40% were for LAGB, 28% for RYGB, and 23% for SG. The most common initial complications were perforations (30%), fistulae (27%), bowel obstruction (14%), vascular injuries (9.5%), and infections (peritonitis, pleurisy, abscesses, and so forth) (8%). Revision surgery was required in 78% of patients, and perioperative complications accounted for 28.5% of dossiers. The experts concluded that fault had occurred in 40% of case. Negligence arising from an error deemed to be an act of negligence was found in 30% of cases, 67% of which were because of delayed diagnosis. Major long-term complications accounted for 8% of dossiers and minor long-term complications for 22%. Forty-seven percent of patients completely recovered., Conclusion: Delayed diagnosis was the main error established by the experts. Surgeons should remain vigilant postoperatively after every bariatric surgical procedure., (Copyright © 2016 American Society for Bariatric Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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34. Complication of bariatric surgery: Legal complaints in France.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Kassir R, Sastre B, Jarry JM, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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35. Bone beveling caused by blunt trauma: a case report.
- Author
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Quatrehomme G, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Buchet L, and Alunni V
- Subjects
- Accidents, Diagnosis, Differential, Dura Mater injuries, Dura Mater pathology, Fatal Outcome, Humans, Male, Temporal Bone pathology, Wounds, Gunshot, Foreign Bodies complications, Temporal Bone injuries
- Abstract
The authors report a fatal case of blunt trauma to the skull caused by a rib of a beach umbrella. The skull displayed a round hole in the right temporal bone with typical internal beveling. Blunt trauma mimicking a gunshot wound (round perforation of the skull with internal beveling) is very rarely reported in the forensic literature.
- Published
- 2016
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36. Legal Claims in Bariatric Surgery.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Kassir R, Sastre B, Gugenheim J, Jarry JM, Gouillat C, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Bartoli C
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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37. Death from Hypothermia during a Training Course under "Extreme Conditions": Related to Two Cases.
- Author
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Perich P, Tuchtan L, Bartoli C, Léonetti G, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain Edema pathology, Catecholamines urine, Creatinine blood, Humans, Hypoglycemia etiology, Hypothermia diagnosis, Male, Military Personnel, Physical Education and Training, Pulmonary Edema pathology, Rhabdomyolysis etiology, Rhabdomyolysis pathology, Snow, Thyroid Hormones blood, Transaminases analysis, Wind, Young Adult, Hypothermia etiology, Mountaineering
- Abstract
Death from hypothermia following exhaustion or from various complicated pathologies is no longer a frequent cause of death among combat troops. During a training course under "extreme conditions" in the French Alps, two young African officers died. Confronted with these two clinically confirmed cases of hypothermia, the unknown anatomopathological and biological specificities associated with death from hypothermia were highlighted. In these typical and clinically confirmed cases of death from subacute exhaustion hypothermia, none of the signs revealed by the autopsy were specific. Although some recent publications have addressed the utility of postmortem biochemical markers when establishing a diagnosis, with no anamnesis, with no knowledge or analysis of the circumstances of death, and without an in situ examination of the body, it appears difficult, if not impossible, to confirm that death was caused by hypothermia., (© 2015 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
- Published
- 2016
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38. Whole body perinatal postmortem CT angiography.
- Author
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Sarda-Quarello L, Bartoli C, Laurent PE, Torrents J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Sigaudy S, Ariey-Bonnet D, and Gorincour G
- Subjects
- Autopsy, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Computed Tomography Angiography, Fetus diagnostic imaging, Perinatal Death, Whole Body Imaging
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Transmission of force to the hyoid bone during manual strangulation: Simulation using finite element numerical models.
- Author
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Niort F, Godio-Raboutet Y, Torrents R, Adalian P, Léonetti G, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Thollon L
- Subjects
- Female, Forensic Medicine, Humans, Hyoid Bone diagnostic imaging, Male, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Asphyxia etiology, Computer Simulation, Finite Element Analysis, Fractures, Bone etiology, Hyoid Bone injuries, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
Introduction: Strangulation is a medicolegal form of mechanical asphyxia, and can be difficult to identify if cutaneous damage to the neck is limited. We began by creating a numerical model of a hyoid bone with adjustable anthropometric parameters and then subjected our model to compression simulating a precision grip on the neck from the front., Materials and Methods: We selected six bones from the 77 hyoid bones contained in the database we created during a previous study led by our laboratory, in which we demonstrated the sexual dimorphism of this bone and identified the minimal force required for fracture. The anthropometric characteristics of these six bones (angle, length and width) corresponded to those of the 10th, 50th and 90th percentiles from cluster 1 (male individuals) and cluster 2 (female individuals), respectively. After enhancing, developing and meshing the selected 3D models, we analysed and reproduced simulation conditions that were as close as possible to the in vivo conditions of neck strangulation from the front (area of pressure on the bone, tissue environment, and biological variability of this bone)., Results: We modelled the six numerical hyoid bone models using the finite element method. For all models, the simulation of mechanical pressure applied to simulate anterior strangulation resulted in fractures. The forces required to produce these fractures matched the results obtained in the experimental testing of dissected hyoid bones., Conclusion: Six finite element numerical models were created, covering the anthropometric morphological variability of the hyoid bone. These six models enabled numerical simulation of the in vivo behaviour of a hyoid bone subjected to one-handed strangulation., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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40. [Post-mortem perinatal imaging: State of the art and perspectives, with an emphasis on ultrasound].
- Author
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Sarda-Quarello L, Tuchtan L, Bartoli C, Bourlière-Najean B, Petit P, Sigaudy S, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Gorincour G
- Subjects
- Female, Fetal Diseases pathology, Humans, Pregnancy, Autopsy methods, Perinatology methods, Ultrasonography
- Abstract
The fields of application of post-mortem imaging have been exponentially growing for 10 years. Its potential to identify the cause of death in trauma and ballistic cases is now properly documented. In pediatric and perinatal practice, large significant series are less available, except for MRI and central nervous system analysis where scientific evidence is now robust. After a short historical and state-of-the-art review, we will try to depict the way we see the future of this sub-specialty of post-mortem imaging, especially in specific perinatal situations., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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41. Relevance of discrete traits in forensic anthropology: From the first cervical vertebra to the pelvic girdle.
- Author
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Verna E, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Chaumoitre K, and Adalian P
- Subjects
- Acromion diagnostic imaging, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brachial Plexus diagnostic imaging, Cervical Plexus diagnostic imaging, Clavicle diagnostic imaging, Female, Forensic Anthropology, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Manubrium diagnostic imaging, Middle Aged, Multidetector Computed Tomography, Pubic Bone diagnostic imaging, Scapula diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Acromion abnormalities, Brachial Plexus abnormalities, Cervical Plexus abnormalities, Clavicle abnormalities, Joint Diseases diagnostic imaging, Manubrium abnormalities, Pubic Bone abnormalities, Scapula abnormalities, Spina Bifida Occulta diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
In forensic anthropology, identification begins by determining the sex, age, ancestry and stature of the individuals. Asymptomatic variations present on the skeleton, known as discrete traits, can be useful to identify individuals, or at least contribute to complete their biological profile. We decided to focus our work on the upper part of the skeleton, from the first vertebra to the pelvic girdle, and we chose to present 8 discrete traits (spina bifida occulta, butterfly vertebra, supraclavicular nerve foramen, coracoclavicular joint, os acromiale, suprascapular foramen, manubrium foramen and pubic spine), because they show a frequency lower than 10%. We examined 502 anonymous CT scans from polytraumatized individuals, aged 15 to 65 years, in order to detect the selected discrete traits. Age and sex were known for each subject. Thin sections in the axial, coronal and sagittal planes and 3D volume rendering images were created and examined for the visualization of the selected discrete traits. Supraclavicular foramina were found only in males and only on the left clavicle. Coracoclavicular joints were observed only in males. The majority of individuals with a suprascapular foramen were older than 50 years of age. Pubic spines were observed mostly in females. Other traits did not present significant association with sex, age and laterality. No association between traits was highlighted. Better knowledge of human skeletal variations will help anthropologists come closer to a positive identification, especially if these variations are rare, therefore making them more discriminant., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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42. Fatal heat stroke in a child entrapped in a confined space.
- Author
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Alunni V, Crenesse D, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Gaillard Y, and Quatrehomme G
- Subjects
- Accidents, Asphyxia pathology, Child, Cyanosis pathology, Fatal Outcome, Hematoma pathology, Humans, Male, Confined Spaces, Heat Stroke etiology
- Abstract
We report the case of a child succumbing to heatstroke caused by confinement in an icebox. The post mortem examination found cyanosis and hematomas indicating that the child had tried to get out of the container. The temperature of the body was higher than it should have been considering the rigor and delay before post mortem examination. The autopsy showed no significant injury and toxicological tests were negative. A physiological study etablished that death resulted from heatstroke, not a lack of oxygen or CO2 poisoning. We conclude that heat stroke should be considered as a possible mechanism of death even in the absence of context of environmental hyperthermia. We recommend that in these situations involving confinement, establishing the mechanism of death should be done not only on the basis of a detailed post-mortem examination to rule out other causes of death, but also based on complete physiological investigations., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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43. Forces transmission to the skull in case of mandibular impact.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Bartoli C, Boisclair D, Adalian P, Léonetti G, Behr M, and Thollon L
- Subjects
- Aged, Biomechanical Phenomena, Cadaver, Female, Finite Element Analysis, Forensic Sciences, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Male, Mandibular Fractures, Models, Biological
- Abstract
Background: Forensic investigations have been reported regarding the loss of consciousness and cardiac arrests resulting from direct mandible impact. However, the mechanisms by which the forces are transferred to the skull through direct mandible impact remain unclear. We conducted a study regarding direct mandible impact on the level of energy required to create a mandible fracture and on the energy dispersion phenomenon to the skull and to the brain., Materials and Methods: This study combines an experimental and numerical approach. Mandible strike was studied using experimental trials performed on post-mortem human subjects. A finite element model of the head and face of a male was also developed based on tomodensitometry scans. The model was validated with literature data and experimental trials. A parametric study was then performed to study the effect of diverse variables such as the dentition integrity, cortical bone thickness, etc., Results: The forces measured on our reference model were 3000 N on the chin, 1800 N at the condyles, and 970 N in the occiput. Of all the results, we observed a decrease of approximately one-third of the efforts from the chin to the base of the skull and a lower half of the still forces at the occiput, except in the edentulous and for the lateral and frontal impact where the force is transmitted directly to the skull base area., Conclusion: This study allowed us to create a 3D model of the mandible and face bones to better understand the force transfer mechanisms into and from the mandible. The parameters of the model may be modified to suit the individual characteristics for forensic investigations and legal matters., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. [Differences in psychiatric expertise of responsibility: Assessment and initial hypotheses through a review of literature].
- Author
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Guivarch J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Glezer D, and Chabannes JM
- Subjects
- France, Humans, Observer Variation, Dissent and Disputes, Expert Testimony legislation & jurisprudence, Insanity Defense, Mental Competency legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Forensic psychiatric assessment regarding liability ensures a balance between justice and psychiatry. In France, criminal assessment is not contradictory. The psychiatric expert is commissioned by judges to determine whether or not the accused has a mental disorder and specify whether it affects discernment and control of actions at the time of offense. Its mission focuses on the mental element required to constitute an offense, and is structured around Article 122-1 of the Criminal Code. This article, composed of two paragraphs, distinguishes the framework of the abolition of discernment — a cause of non-imputability and therefore of a statement of lack of criminal responsibility due to mental disorder — and the framework of the alteration of discernment. Nowadays expertise seems to meet discomfort, with criticism focusing on possible differences among psychiatric experts, without specific studies having been conducted to confirm it., Objectives: Our objective was to identify the main points of disagreement between psychiatric experts and to propose explicative hypotheses., Materials and Methods: For this, we carried out a literature review on PubMed, Science Direct and Cairn, and studied the report of the 2007 public hearing on forensic psychiatric assessment with contributions from different authors. The keywords were: forensic psychiatry, psychiatric court report, psychiatric expertise, differences among experts, legal responsibility, and discernment. We defined differences as disagreements between experts, or as a mismatch in conclusions and approaches of experts., Results: The differences among experts concerned mainly forensic interpretation, i.e. the discussion of the relationship between pathology and offense, particularly in contexts that involve a larger forensic discussion, including interruption of medication, use of drugs, association with antisocial personality, premeditation, denial of facts, especially when the accused suffers from a mental illness (especially schizophrenia). For a finding of abolition of discernment, an expert must consider two requirements, one temporal (the mental disease must be active during offense) and the other causal that involves seeking a direct and exclusive relationship between the offence and the mental state, according to expert jurisprudence. Some experts do not comply with these two requirements or this jurisprudence, whence differences. There were also diagnostic differences and disputes relating to the concept of "alteration of discernment". Disagreements appeared to be related primarily to personal ideologies or different schools of thought that influenced interpretations and conclusions of experts, e.g. accountability as a therapeutic response for the psychotic person. Then, the lack of clarity of expert mission regarding necessary causal relationship — between any disease and crime — to demonstrate to conclude an abolition of discernment, could also contribute to differences. Moreover, time available to achieve the mission is too short and the expert would not devote enough time to an expert examination, which could lead to less good expertise and differences; especially as observed clinical examination in expertise is sometimes difficult, misleading, due to pathological reticence of accused mentally ill but also sometimes due to possible simulations. Finally, the low quality of some expert reports — due in part to the less well-trained experts, but also the particular conditions of achievement of expertise, especially in prisons — were mentioned by some authors as causes of differences., Discussion: It appears from this review of literature that differences mainly concern forensic interpretation and are mainly explained by ideologies. This synthesis is a preliminary work prior to a study among psychiatric experts., (Copyright © 2015 L’Encéphale, Paris. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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45. [Vulvar lichen sclerosus in children misdiagnosed as sexual abuse].
- Author
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Delmarre E, Delteil C, Mallet S, Boval C, Capasso F, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Child Abuse, Sexual diagnosis, Diagnostic Errors, Diseases in Twins diagnosis, Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus diagnosis
- Abstract
Introduction: With the frequency of lawsuits for sexual abuse increasing, high-quality care for victims is of utmost importance. Genital examination is difficult to perform, especially on children, but is a key item for diagnosis. A case report is presented herein to illustrate this issue., Case Presentation: A sexual assault was suspected on 2.5-year-old female twins. Clinical examination primarily detected vulvar micro-hematoma and hypopigmentation, discreetly sclerosing, as well as atrophic labia and a beginning of lichenification on one of them. The other twin showed an unspecific and erythematous lesion. Elimination of the supposedly dangerous environment and a remote consultation brought out a paradoxical development to the story and confirmed the diagnosis of vulvar lichen sclerosus., Discussion: Traumatic lesions caused by sexual abuse are uncommon. Coexisting allegations and lesions in the genital area lend support to the hypothesis of sexual abuse. However, genital-anal tropism dermatosis can mimic traumatic injuries. Lichen sclerosus is an example of a differential diagnosis of vulvar traumatic lesions, which is quite often unknown to physicians, including pediatricians. This case report shows that taking the appropriate time in multidisciplinary councils can suggest a differential diagnosis. Nonetheless, it should be remembered that identifying the pathology behind the lesions cannot allow the physician to negate the child's story about potentially sexual acts, although the truth of this story and the perpetrator must still be proven by a court of law., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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46. Determination of sex: interest of frontal sinus 3D reconstructions.
- Author
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Michel J, Paganelli A, Varoquaux A, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Adalian P, Leonetti G, and Dessi P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Discriminant Analysis, Female, Forensic Anthropology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Young Adult, Frontal Sinus anatomy & histology, Frontal Sinus diagnostic imaging, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Sex Determination by Skeleton methods
- Abstract
Frontal sinuses (FSs) have been studied in radiology, anthropology, and forensic anthropology. This study aimed to determine whether it was possible to predict the age and sex of an individual using FS volume. Sixty-nine anonymized CT scans were imported to MIMICS 10.01(®) software (Materialise N.V.), and each FS volume was calculated in mm(3) . There was an absence of significant difference between right and left FS volume (p = 0.173) and an absence of correlation between age and FS volume (Pearson's test; p = 0.705). Sexual dimorphism was significantly different (p = 0.001). However, the most discriminant datum for determining sex was found to be the total FS volume (sum of an individual's right and left FS volumes) with linear discriminant Fisher's function coefficients of -2.759 for the male group and -1.275 for the female group. With this model, 72.5% of our sample was correctly classified according to sex., (© 2015 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
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- 2015
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47. Liability under post-tonsillectomy lethal bleeding of the tonsillar artery: a report of two cases.
- Author
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Tuchtan L, Torrents J, Lebreton-Chakour C, Niort F, Christia-Lotter MA, Delmarre E, Nicollas R, and Piercecchi-Marti MD
- Subjects
- Asphyxia etiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Fatal Outcome, Female, Humans, Palatine Tonsil blood supply, Respiratory Aspiration, Liability, Legal, Malpractice, Postoperative Hemorrhage etiology, Tonsillectomy adverse effects
- Abstract
Post-operative haemorrhage is a frequent complication of tonsillectomy: a primary haemorrhage occurring in the first hours is rapidly dealt with by the surgical team. A secondary haemorrhage, which commonly occurs once the child has returned home, can be fatal if it is not dealt with quickly. We present two cases of a lethal outcome in children following a secondary post-tonsillectomy haemorrhage, for which the parents filed legal proceedings. Medical liability can be exercised during all stages of health care. Performing an autopsy associated with histological analyses is found to be indispensable for the identification of the causes of bleeding, as well as its mechanism., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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48. [Responsibility for prescribing and monitoring an act transfusion and safety blood transfusion].
- Author
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Piercecchi-Marti MD, Tuchtan-Torrents L, Lassale B, Leonetti G, and Bartoli C
- Subjects
- Allied Health Personnel, Blood Banks, Blood Transfusion standards, Blood-Borne Pathogens, Causality, Compensation and Redress legislation & jurisprudence, Diagnostic Errors, Disease Transmission, Infectious legislation & jurisprudence, Disease Transmission, Infectious prevention & control, France, Humans, Inappropriate Prescribing legislation & jurisprudence, Medical Errors, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Sexual Partners, Transfusion Reaction, Treatment Refusal legislation & jurisprudence, Blood Safety standards, Blood Transfusion legislation & jurisprudence, Malpractice, Prescriptions standards, Social Responsibility
- Abstract
The act to transfuse is a prescription following basic rules similar to drug prescriptions. If harm happens, potentially linked with this prescription, the harm's responsibility is borne by the physician, the paramedics, the care organization but by the supplier laboratory too. The setting of good practice rules consistent with science data at the time when the act is performed, the respect of the patient's rights and the quality of supplied products will be assessed during the expertise. Under restorative responsibility, it is necessary to previously establish a direct and certain causation between the litigious act and the harm to enforce the vicarious liability. Nowadays, legal precedents grant a larger protection to more and more numerous victims, enhancing the field of the fault with the appeal to assumption of fault. At the same time, the lawmaker himself promulgated objective conditions of compensation for many categories of victims of medical risk from which transfused people are part. The law of March the 4th of 2002 went one step closer devoting a new foundation of compensation: national solidarity., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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49. Acute aortic dissection diagnosed after embalming: macroscopic and microscopic findings.
- Author
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Savall F, Dedouit F, Piercecchi-Marti MD, Leonetti G, Rougé D, and Telmon N
- Subjects
- Cardiac Tamponade etiology, Coronary Vessels injuries, Coronary Vessels pathology, Forensic Pathology, Hemorrhage pathology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pericardial Effusion pathology, Tunica Intima injuries, Tunica Intima pathology, Aorta injuries, Aorta pathology, Embalming
- Abstract
A 58-year-old man died suddenly in Madagascar and poisoning was suspected. The body was embalmed after death and the general state of preservation was good. We found a major aortic dissection with a large false lumen from the aortic root to the common iliac arteries and a hemopericardium with formalinized blood clot. The intimal tear was on the ascending aorta, and an intramural hemorrhage was noted at the right coronary artery, attesting to a retrograde dissection. Microscopic studies confirmed aortic dissection with extensive intramural hemorrhage and also confirmed the retrograde dissection to the right coronary artery with a reduction of 90% of the true lumen. Classically, aortic dissection occurs in individuals with hypertension and individuals with genetic disorders of collagen formation. The diagnosis is often first established at the postmortem examination. Aortic dissection is therefore dealt with largely in necropsy studies. The usual cause of death is rupture into the pericardial sac. One case of bloodless dissection has been reported but the sudden death was explained by acute myocardial ischemia secondary to dissection of the left coronary artery. In our case, we found major hemopericardium and also intramural hemorrhage at the right coronary artery. We were able to make the diagnosis of aortic dissection and exclude the suspicion of homicide 15 days after death and after embalming., (© 2014 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.)
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- 2014
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50. Postmortem CT appearance of gas collections in fatal diving accidents.
- Author
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Laurent PE, Coulange M, Mancini J, Bartoli C, Desfeux J, Piercecchi-Marti MD, and Gorincour G
- Subjects
- Accidents classification, Accidents statistics & numerical data, Adult, Aged, Causality, Cause of Death, Comorbidity, Decompression Sickness mortality, Diagnosis, Differential, France epidemiology, Humans, Incidence, Middle Aged, Pneumothorax mortality, Postmortem Changes, Risk Factors, Subcutaneous Emphysema mortality, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods, Autopsy methods, Decompression Sickness diagnostic imaging, Pneumothorax diagnostic imaging, Subcutaneous Emphysema diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE. The purpose of our study was to define the postmortem CT semiology of gas collections linked to putrefaction, postmortem "off-gassing," and decompression illness after fatal diving accidents and to establish postmortem CT diagnostic criteria to distinguish the different causes of death in diving. SUBJECTS AND METHODS. A 4-year prospective study was conducted including cases of death during diving. A hyperbaric physician analyzed the circumstances of death and the dive profile, and an autopsy was performed. Subjects were divided into three groups according to the analysis from their dive profile: decompression illness, death after decompression dive without decompression illness, and death after nondecompression dive without decompression illness. Full-body postmortem CT was performed before autopsy. RESULTS. The presence of intraarterial gas associated with death by decompression illness had a negative predictive value (NPV) of 100%, but the positive predictive value (PPV) was only 54% because of postmortem off-gassing. The PPV reached 70% when considering pneumatization of the supraaortic trunks. Pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, and intraarterial gas, all of which are classic criteria for decompression illness diagnosis, are not specific for decompression illness. CONCLUSION. This study is the first to show that pneumothorax, subcutaneous emphysema, and intraarterial gas, all of which are classic criteria for decompression illness diagnosis, are not specific for decompression illness. Complete pneumatization of supraaortic trunks is the best postmortem CT criteria to detect a fatal decompression illness when CT is performed within 24 hours after death.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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