Investigation of the applicability of virtual gastroscopy based on postmortem computed tomography to detect changes in the stomach, along with reports of three rare cases.
Leg Med (Tokyo)
; 52: 101898, 2021 Sep.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-33962163
Postmortem computed tomography is now being used more commonly for routine forensic investigation. The use of 3D reconstruction techniques including virtual gastroscopy is effective and also improves the speed of interpretation, recognition, and description of specific clinical conditions. However, it has been unclear whether postmortem virtual endoscopy could be applicable for medicolegal autopsy or whether it could complement pathological examination at autopsy. Here, we investigated the applicability of postmortem virtual gastroscopy by reviewing 295 medicolegal autopsy cases seen at our institution, and found four cases in which the technique had been able to demonstrate features corresponding to changes that were evident at autopsy. Thus,postmortem virtual gastroscopy would have only rarely been effective forvisualizing any change in the stomach in such cases. In addition, we describe in detail three of those cases in which virtual gastroscopy had been able to visualize changes in the stomach, including a gastric ulcer, a polyp, and the presence of foamy fluid, which were all verified at autopsy. In those cases, virtual gastroscopy was useful for understanding features in the stomach of the deceased, which were revealed by axial images of the abdomen, to forensic pathologists who were not familiar with PMCT 2D images. Taken together, our findings suggest that postmortem virtual gastroscopy might help facilitate clear, straightforward sharing of information about PMCT images of complex anatomical structures among radiologists and forensic pathologists, as well as non-medical professionals with a limited knowledge of anatomy and physiology.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X
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Gastroscopia
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2021
Tipo de documento:
Article