Abstract

Medical examiners who investigate infant deaths are required to consider a large number of natural and non-natural causes due to the broad differential diagnosis of unexpected infant death. Among the myriad of causes are those related to disorders in structure and function of the cardiovascular system. Adult hearts are routinely and efficiently evaluated by medical examiners because of the large anatomic structures and limited spectrum of commonly encountered diseases. Infant deaths are comparatively rare. Although infant hearts may be evaluated with similar efficiency, the pathologist must first have a detailed knowledge of developmental cardiovascular anatomy and of the subtleties of a broad spectrum of infantile cardiovascular pathology. Furthermore, the pathologist must be aware of additional details to be observed and documented in infant cardiac studies, and of the dissection techniques that facilitate acquisition of that data. Rote dissection of an infant heart as if it were an adult heart may lead to overlooked malformations and diseases that may have been the underlying cause of death. This brief review paper covers the fundamentals of pediatric cardiovascular anatomy and dissection techniques as they apply to the practice of pediatric forensic pathology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call