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Revista Mexicana de Medicina Forense y Ciencias de la Salud

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2020, Number 2

Rev Mex Med Forense 2020; 5 (2)

Radiological implications in Forensic Science

Gisbert MES, Aruquipa Cabezas E
Full text How to cite this article

Language: Spanish
References: 12
Page: 50-58
PDF size: 729.16 Kb.


Key words:

X-ray, plans, skeletal remains, tissue, trauma, pathology.

ABSTRACT

The Forensic Radiology Service of the IDIF, has an important role in criminal investigation, interacting with the Units of Medicine and Forensic Anthropology, where images are fundamental in the determination of trauma, constituting a test reliable, objective and scientific in demonstrating injury; in any case the images can prove or disapprove of the existence of injuries, as well as establish their location, quantity and other characteristics that relate to the typification of recent or old injury, antemorten or postmorte, their scopes go to the search identifying data and the determination of foreign elements or prostheses in complex corpses and bear debris, their findings are expressed according to radiological criteria validated by the scientific community and their goal is to optimize the protocols of action legal doctor in the pipeline for virtosy or virtual autopsy.


REFERENCES

  1. E. Gisbert Monzón. Antropología Forense – Identificación Humana Mediante el Análisis de restos óseos. Boletín Informativo BIM, Facultad de Ciencias Farmacéuticas y Bioquímicas UMSA, No 95/96/2014, DL 4-3-70-10. 5-6.

  2. G.F. Giannakopoulos, T.P. Saltzherr, L.F. Beenen, J.B. Reitsma, F.W. Bloemers, J.C. Goslings, for the REACT Study Group, et al. Missed injuries during the initial assessment in a cohort of 1124 level-1 trauma patients. Injury, 43 (2012), pp. 1517-1521

  3. M. Shkrum, D. Ramsay, Patología Forense de Trauma; 2006.

  4. JA. Gisbert Calabuig, E. Villanueva: Medicina Legal y Toxicología. 6ª edición. Editorial Massón. Barcelona, 2004.

  5. J. Rodríguez Cuenca. La antropología forense en la identificación humana. 1ª edición. Bogotá, D. C., Colombia, 2004.

  6. D. Ubelaker,: "Human Skeletal Remains", Manuals on Archeology 2, Taraxacum, Washington, 1989.

  7. Persson, C. Jackowski. Advances of dual source, dual-energy imaging in postmortem CT. EJR 2008; 68: 446-55.

  8. S. Paydar, F. Ghaffarpasand, M. Foroughi, A. Saberi, M. Dehghankhalili, H. Abbasi, et al. Role of routine pelvic radiography in initial evaluation of stable, high-energy, blunt trauma patients. Emerg Med J, 30 (2013), pp. 724-727

  9. E. Gisbert Monzón, S. Pantoja Vacaflor Estudio forense de la vía respiratoria en cadáveres carbonizados, Revista Mexicana de Medicina forense y ciencias de la salud, vol 1, Nro1, 2016. 05-11.

  10. R. Van Vugt, D.R. Kool, S.F. Lubeek, H.M. Dekker, M. Brink, J. Deunk, et al. An evidence based blunt trauma protocol. Emerg Med J, 30 (2013), pp. e23

  11. IE. Gibb. Computed tomography of projectile injuries. Commentary. Clinical Radiology 2008; 63: 1167-8.

  12. LR. Folio, et al, Based ballistic wound path identification and trajectory analysis in anatomic ballistic phantoms. Radiology 2011; 258: 923-9.




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Rev Mex Med Forense. 2020;5