Erschienen in:
01.06.2014 | Forensic Medicine
Post-mortem whole body computed tomography of opioid (heroin and methadone) fatalities: frequent findings and comparison to autopsy
verfasst von:
Sebastian Winklhofer, Eddie Surer, Garyfalia Ampanozi, Thomas Ruder, Paul Stolzmann, Marina Elliott, Andrea Oestreich, Thomas Kraemer, Michael Thali, Hatem Alkadhi, Wolf Schweitzer
Erschienen in:
European Radiology
|
Ausgabe 6/2014
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Abstract
Objective
To investigate frequent findings in cases of fatal opioid intoxication in whole-body post-mortem computed tomography (PMCT).
Methods
PMCT of 55 cases in which heroin and/or methadone had been found responsible for death were retrospectively evaluated (study group), and were compared with PMCT images of an age- and sex-matched control group. Imaging results were compared with conventional autopsy.
Results
The most common findings in the study group were: pulmonary oedema (95 %), aspiration (66 %), distended urinary bladder (42 %), cerebral oedema (49 %), pulmonary emphysema (38 %) and fatty liver disease (36 %). These PMCT findings occurred significantly more often in the study group than in the control group (p < 0.05). The combination of lung oedema, brain oedema and distended urinary bladder was seen in 26 % of the cases in the study group but never in the control group (0 %). This triad, as indicator of opioid-related deaths, had a specificity of 100 %, as confirmed by autopsy and toxicological analysis.
Conclusions
Frequent findings in cases of fatal opioid intoxication were demonstrated. The triad of brain oedema, lung oedema and a distended urinary bladder on PMCT was highly specific for drug-associated cases of death.
Key Points
• Frequent findings in cases of fatal opioid intoxication were investigated.
• Lung oedema, brain oedema and full urinary bladder represent a highly specific constellation.
• This combination of findings in post-mortem CT should raise suspicion of intoxication.