Abstract

Fatal intoxications are common in a medico-legal autopsy setting and are associated with sparse findings during autopsy. It has been suggested that an increased lung weight may be associated with such fatalities. Previous literature is generally limited to a descriptive approach, including only opioid deaths, and lacking a definition of "heavy" lungs. Our aim was to create a model to identify cases with heavy lungs and to assess the predictive power of "heavy" lungs in identifying cases of different types of fatal intoxications during autopsy in an unselected medico-legal autopsy population. We identified all medico-legal autopsy cases ≥18years in Sweden from 2000 through 2013. The lung weight to heart weight (LWHW) ratio was calculated. The positive predictive values (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) of both lung weight and LWHW ratio were calculated. Mean lung weight was higher in the intoxication group but the predictive power in the individual case was limited. Lung weight to heart weight ratio had better predictive power than lung weight alone, with a PPV of at most 0.15(0.14, 0.16 95% CI), while the NPV was 0.96 (0.95, 0.96 95% CI). The association between fatal intoxication and increased lung weight was positive, regardless of method and cutoffs used. While the PPV was poor, the NPV could reduce suspicion of fatal intoxication in the absence of other information. LHWH ratio is only a probability factor for fatal intoxication; accurate cause of death determination-as always-requires consideration of circumstances, autopsy, and toxicologic findings.

Highlights

  • Fatal intoxications are prevalent in a medico-­legal autopsy setting, constituting approximately 10% of medico-­legal autopsies in Sweden

  • The lung weight to heart weight ratio (LWHW ratio) was calculated for each case, and the mean ratio was calculated in the total population and in each stratum of sex and body mass index (BMI) category

  • We identified heavy lungs based on cases where the LWHW ratio was above the mean, both overall and in subgroups based on sex and BMI category

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Fatal intoxications are prevalent in a medico-­legal autopsy setting, constituting approximately 10% of medico-­legal autopsies in Sweden (internal data). These cases are difficult to diagnose at autopsy as morphological findings are sparse, “heavy lungs” has been suggested as a finding indicating fatal intoxication in several studies [1–­8]. These studies are, (i) mostly limited to opioid deaths, (ii) based on small samples, and (iii) only descriptive and/or compare only mean values of lung weight across different causes of death. Apart from one study [10], neither height, weight, age, nor BMI have yielded models of practical use

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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