Lecture Ix: Death by Asphyxia
Lecture Ix: Death by Asphyxia
Lecture Ix: Death by Asphyxia
- is the general term applied to all forms of violent death which results primarily
from the interference with the process of respiration or the condition in which the supply of
oxygen to the respiration or the condition in which the supply of oxygen to the blood or to the
tissues or both has been reduced below normal level.
Types:
1. Anoxic Death – associated with the failure of the arterial blood to become normally saturated
with oxygen. Due to:
a. Breathing in an atmosphere without or with insufficient oxygen, as in high altitude
b. Obstruction of the air passage due to pressure from outside, as in traumatic crush
asphyxia
c. Paralysis of the respiratory center due to poisoning, injury or anesthesia, etc.
d. Mechanical interference with the passage of air into or down the respiratory tract due
to:
closure of the external repiratory orifice, like in smothering and overlaying
obstruction of the air passage, as in drowning, choking with foreign body
impact, etc.
repiratory abnormalities, like pneumonia, asthma, emphysema and
pulmonary edema
2. Anemic Anoxic Death – due to a decreased capacity of the blood to carry oxygen. Due to:
a. Severe hemorrhage
b. Poisoning like carbon monoxide
c. Low hemoglobin level in the blood
3. Stagnant Anoxic death – brought by the failure of circulation. Due to
a. heart failure
b. shock
c. arterial and venous obstruction, incident to embolism, vacular spasm, varicose vains,
or the use of tourniquet
4. Histotoxic Anoxic death – due to the failure of the cellular oxidative process, although the
oxygen is delivered to the tissues, it cannot be utilized properly.
CLASIFFICATION OF ASPHYXIA:
1. Hanging
2. Strangulations:
a. strangulation by ligature
b. manual strangulation or trottling
c. Special forms of strangulations:
- palmar
- garroting
- mugging or yoking
- compression of the neck with stick
3. Suffocation
a. smothering or closing of the mouth and nostrils by solid objects
b. choking or closing of the air passage by obstruction of its lumen
4. Asphyxia by submersion or drowning
5. Asphyxia by pressure on the chest
6. Asphyxia by irrespirable gases.
If dead body recovered in H2O – physician must answer the ff. questions:
2. Did death occur prior to entry in H2O? If so what was the cause of death?
3. Did drowning cause death? If so is it fresh/salty H2O pool?
4. Any ante-mortem injuries? If so did they play any part in the death
5. Any post-mortem injuries?
6. was there any natural disease? Poisoning? Contribution to death?
Post-Mortem;
Internal Findings:
a. Respiratory System:
1. “Emphysema aquosum”- remedial air - balloons
2. “Edema Aquosum” - H2O is air sacs
3. “Champignon d’ocume” – whitish foam – nostrils mouth
Gettler’s Test – quantitative determination of the chlorise content of the blood in the right
and left ventricle of the heart.
- difference if of at least 25 mcg. Proves that death occurred in fresh salt
H2O and drowning is the cause of the death
- salt H2O – Cl content of right side vert is less than lt. = fresh H2O – CL-
lt of right side less than lt.
Burling – invented by Burks and Hare – murdering people to be sold to medical schools
Death by Crucifixion – interested on the how Jesus Christ dies?
- when person is nailed on the cross the wt. Is supported by the nailed ft.
In order to breath – person has to raise his body and throne his weight on
his feet.
- When on the corss- intercostals number are stretched – chest cage is
fixed. Alternative lowering and raising of the body lead to exhaustion –
unconsciosness – death by classification as traumatic Asphyxia
Assignment: Medico –legal Aspects of Sex Crimes:
b. Heart
c. Stomach
d. Brain
e. Blood
f. Other organs