Abstract
The medical and biomechanical assessment of injuries from blows to the head is a common task in forensic medicine. In the context of a criminal justice process, the injury potential of different striking weapons is important. The article at hand compares the injury potential of assaults with a 0.5-l beer bottle and a 0.33-l Coke bottle, both made of glass. The research team hit 30 used empty 0.5-l beer bottles and 20 used empty 0.33-l Coke bottles manually on an aluminum dummy skull set on a force measuring plate, using acrylic and pork rind as a scalp surrogate. There was no significant difference in fracture threshold and energy transfer between the examined beer and Coke bottles. Both glass bottles are able to cause fractures to the facial bones while cranial bone fractures are primarily not to be expected. Blows with a 0.5-l beer bottle or with a 0.33-l Coke bottle to the head can transfer up to 1.255 N and thus are able to cause severe blunt as well as sharp trauma injuries.
Highlights
The forensic-medical and biomechanical assessment of blunt and sharp force trauma injuries due to assaults are a common task for the practicing forensic specialist
Eighty-eight strikes were performed with 0.5-l beer bottles and 74 strikes with 0.33-l Coke bottles
The blows with empty glass bottles on the skull coated with acrylic and on
Summary
The forensic-medical and biomechanical assessment of blunt and sharp force trauma injuries due to assaults are a common task for the practicing forensic specialist. Head trauma in particular is a complex area of study as it has many individual varieties in anatomy and mechanical properties. In this context, the injury potential of the striking weapon used is an essential part in the medicolegal analysis. The differentiation between minor and grievous bodily harm is based on the assessment of both the action performed and the weapon used. Fatal intracranial injuries are not necessarily accompanied by fractures to the skull. While skull fractures per se are not Hospital Ulm, Ulm, Germany 3 Institute of Forensic Medicine, Ludwig-Maximilian
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