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עמוד בית
Fri, 09.01.26

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Postmortem Computed Tomography in Victims of Military Air Mishaps: Radiological-Pathological Correlation of CT Findings

Click on the icon on the upper right hand side for the article by Gad Levy, MD, Liav Goldstein, MD, MHA, Arie Blachar, MD, Sara Apter, MD, Erez Barenboim, MD, MHA, Yaron Bar-Dayan, MD, MHA, Ari Shamis, MD, MHA and Eli Atar, MD.
IMAJ 2007: 9: October: 699-702
Abstract

A thorough medical inquiry is included in every aviation mishap investigation. While the gold standard of this investigation is a forensic pathology examination, numerous reports stress the important role of computed tomography in the postmortem evaluation of trauma victims. To characterize the findings identified by postmortem CT and compare its performance to conventional autopsy in victims of military aviation mishaps, we analyzed seven postmortem CT examinations. Musculoskeletal injuries accounted for 57.8% of traumatic findings, identified by postmortem CT. The most frequent findings were fractures of the rib (47%), skull (9.6%) and facial bones (8.6%). Abnormally located air accounted for 24% of findings, for which CT was superior (3.5% detected by autopsy, 100% by postmortem CT, P < 0.001).  The performance of autopsy in detecting injuries was superior (autopsy detected 85.8% of all injuries, postmortem CT detected 53.9%, P < 0.001), especially in the detection of superficial lesions (100% detected by autopsy, 10.5% by postmortem CT, P < 0.001) and solid organ injuries (100% by autopsy, 18.5% by postmortem CT, P < 0.001), and in the detection of musculoskeletal injuries (91.3% for autopsy, 90.3% for postmortem CT, P = not significant). Postmortem CT and autopsy have distinct performance profiles, and although the first cannot replace the latter it is a useful complementary examination.

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