Abstract

Differential diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage due to traumatic and non-traumatic origin is a challenging issue, especially in the absence of visible body injuries and other signs of violence. For a forensic expert-practitioner, the main thing is objectivity, accuracy, and speed of obtaining the result, which could fully satisfy the methods of laser polarimetry in the case of differential diagnosis of hemorrhages of traumatic and non-traumatic origin in the human brain matter.
 The purpose: To develop forensic criteria for the differential diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage of traumatic and non-traumatic origin using Mueller-matrix microscopy of linear dichroism.
 Materials and methods: The object of the study was brain matter samples, collected in 115 corpses of both sexes aged 22 to 86 years with accurately known causes of death. The causes of death included coronary artery disease, traumatic brain hemorrhage, ischemic brain infarction, and non-traumatic brain hemorrhages. Brain matter samples have been frozen rapidly, and histological sections have been made using a freezing microtome. The slices have been evaluated using the method of azimuthal-invariant Mueller-matrix microscopy, followed by mathematical and statistical processing of the results. 
 Results: significant topographic heterogeneity of Mueller-matrix invariants of brain matter samples linear dichroism maps among all research groups have been found. Individual and significant variations of dispersion, asymmetry, and kurtosis magnitude have confirmed the heterogeneity of Mueller-matrix invariants. The difference of images and histograms among groups is explained by the presence of necrotic changes in the case of ischemic brain necrosis and blood cells in the brain matter samples. For the set of central statistical moments of the 1st, 3rd, and 4th orders, which characterize the distributions of circular dichroism, the method of MM-microscopy in the differentiation of samples of non-hemorrhage and hemorrhage groups reaches a satisfactory level - 78% - 84%.
 Conclusions: Brain matter samples Muller-matrix microscopy of linear dichroism is effective for solving diagnostic problems of forensic medicine related to evaluating the cause of death from intracerebral hemorrhage of various origins. Diagnostic efficiency of Mueller-matrix mapping of polarization manifestations of linear dichroism method for intergroup differentiation of samples of deaths from traumatic hemorrhage (Group 2) and ischemic cerebral infarction (Group 3) reaches a satisfactory level of 79 - 84%.

Highlights

  • Forensic pathology of trauma is a complex and extremely important area of forensic science and is dedicated to evaluating the causes, mechanisms, and outcomes of traumatic injuries (Bertozzi et al, 2020)

  • Brain matter samples Muller-matrix microscopy of linear dichroism is effective for solving diagnostic problems of forensic medicine related to evaluating the cause of death from intracerebral hemorrhage of various origins

  • The samples have been divided into 4 research groups, depending on the cause of death: coronary artery disease (CAD) – Group 1 - 20 samples (17.4%), Traumatic brain hemorrhage (TBH) – Group 2 - 30 samples (26.1%), ischemic brain infarction (IBI) – Group 3 - 35 samples (30,4%), non-traumatic brain hemorrhages (NTBH) – Group 4 - 30 samples (26.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Forensic pathology of trauma is a complex and extremely important area of forensic science and is dedicated to evaluating the causes, mechanisms, and outcomes of traumatic injuries (Bertozzi et al, 2020). Traumatic brain hemorrhage (TBH) is one of the most common injuries. The identification and diverse morphological assessment of injuries to the skull bones and brain matter require a methodologically correct approach (Finnie, 2016). Differential diagnosis of intracerebral hemorrhage due to traumatic and non-traumatic origin is a challenging issue, especially in the absence of visible body injuries and other signs of violence (Hao & Wang, 2017). Bachinsky VT (Bachinsky et al, 2021) corroborated the role of Mueller-matrix analysis in the differential diagnosis of acute myocardial ischemia and chronic coronary artery disease. (Sivokorovskaya et al, 2020) demonstrated the role of polarization-phase diagnostics of the volume of blood loss Sivokorovskaya A. (Sivokorovskaya et al, 2020) demonstrated the role of polarization-phase diagnostics of the volume of blood loss

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