Immersion Death: Dr. Rayyan Al-Ali
Immersion Death: Dr. Rayyan Al-Ali
Immersion Death: Dr. Rayyan Al-Ali
When the nature of the injuries is such that they could not
have occurred in water, the issue is clear. Burns, missile wounds,
the effect of explosions (other than compression injury) and
patterned injuries may be incompatible with infliction in water,
and must therefore be related to the effects of a previous assault
or some accident on board ship or aircraft.
INJURIES SUSTAINED IN THE WATER
• Trauma in the water is common, as both an ante-mortem
and a postmortem phenomenon.
• The issue usually becomes one of attempting to
distinguish injuries sustained during life from those after
death.
• Water complicates the problem by washing away surface
bleeding from open injuries. A laceration inflicted during
life will, however, usually show some bleeding into the
tissues under the margins of the wound, at least until
postmortem decomposition blurs the appearances.
Freshwater vs seawater
Causes of death in drowning
The autopsy signs of drowning
Chemical changes in the blood
Histologic changes
Diatoms and the diagnosis of drowning
Estimate time of drowning
Types of drowning:
Less deleterious to heart function and helped to explain the longer survival time in
seawater immersion.
5) Exhaustion.
The oedema fluid in the bronchi blocks the passive collapse that normally occurs
at death.
This may be sufficient to mark the lateral surfaces of the lungs with the
impression of the ribs, leaving visible and palpable grooves after removal of the
organs from the thorax.
Fig. Cut section of lung showing
Pulmonary edema
Sub-pleural heamorrhages (paultauf
spots):
Reflecting intra-alveolar heamorrhages
Stomach full of water
Haemorrhage into the middle ears and into the temporal
bone
Aqueous liquid inside sinuses
Cadaveric Spasms
Involving the hand (firmly grasping weeds or sands) indicating the victims
was alive when immersed
Chemical changes
Because of the marked haemodilution that occurs in freshwater drowning and the
electrolyte shifts in saltwater drowning, it is reasonable to expect that chemical
analyses of the plasma should provide reliable evidence of drowning.
Unfortunately, these theoretical hopes have not been realized in practice, mainly
because of the biochemical chaos that occurs soon after death from any cause, in
which the ability of live cell membranes to partition fluid and electrolytes is
rapidly lost.
Normally chloride con. In rt. And lt. chambers are equal.
The basic premise is that when a live person is drowned in water containing
diatoms (microscopic algae with a silicaceous exoskeleton), many diatoms will
penetrate the alveolar walls and be carried to distant target organs such as brain,
kidney, liver and bone marrow. After autopsy, samples of these organs can be
digested with strong acid to dissolve the soft tissue, thus leaving the highly
resistant diatom skeletons to be identified under the microscope.
When a dead body is deposited in water or when death in the water is not due to
drowning, then, although diatoms may reach the lungs by passive percolation, the
absence of a beating heart prevents circulation of diatoms to distant organs.
Time passed since drowning
Estimated through :
Rate of body cooling
Floating of body (occurs after 5-8 days in summer)
Volume of pleural fluid accumulated