Abstract

To the Editor. —In discussing the pathologic changes in eyes of children who died after suspected child abuse, Elner et al 1 asserted such trauma may be repeated is indicated by positive stains for hemosiderin; this statement provides an opportunity for medicolegal confusion and miscarriage of justice. According to one source, 2 hemosiderin, a breakdown product of hemoglobin from red blood cells, may be identified as early as 1 day after injury, although other authors 3 are fairly circumspect and suggest that an interval of several days must pass before hemosiderin is deposited; macrophages that assemble ferritin into hemosiderin are identified at injury sites within 48 to 72 hours. Certainly, the detection of hemosiderin may indicate repeated trauma, but hemosiderin may also be a marker of survival after one episode of trauma. A child may be traumatized once and survive long enough for hemoglobin to be metabolized into hemosiderin.

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