Vol 6, No 2 (2020)
- Year: 2020
- Published: 02.07.2020
- Articles: 9
- URL: https://for-medex.ru/jour/issue/view/26
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.19048/2411-8729-2020-6-2
Full Issue
Leading article
ON THE USE OF ICD-10 REGULATIONS IN POSTMORTEM DIAGNOSIS, CODING AND SELECTION OF THE PRIMARY CAUSE OF DEATH IN COVID-19-RELATED TRAUMA AND DISEASES
Abstract
Aim. For the purpose of ensuring the reliability of national mortality statistics, the present regulations set out to generalize current information on the preparation of primary medical documentation on the basis of requirements for filing death certificates, ICD-10 rules and recommendations by the Russian Ministry of Health.
Material and methods. Existing requirements for filing death certificates, ICD-10 rules updated by WHO in 1996–2019 and recommendations by the Russian Ministry of Health were analysed.
Results. The preparation of primary medical documentation, formulation of the concluding clinical, pathological, anatomical and forensic post-mortem diagnosis, issuance of death certificates, selection and coding of the primary cause of death should be carried out in accordance with the unified ICD-10 rules. Postmortem diagnosis should correspond to Volume 3 of ICD-10.
Due to the pandemic of a new coronavirus infection, referred to as COVID-19, in 2019, WHO introduced changes to the ICD-10. COVID-19 was included in ICD-10 chapter XXII and received the codes of U07.1 and U07.2. COVID-19-accosiated deaths were divided into those where COVID-19 is determined to be the primary cause of death and those where COVID-19 falls into the category “other” causes.
COVID-19 with fatal complications is most frequently selected as the primary cause of death in acute conditions, with concurrent chronic diseases (cancer, diabetes, chronic forms of ischemic and cerebrovascular diseases, etc.) being indicated as “other” causes of death in Part II of the death certificate. In the presence of trauma, poisoning, bleeding and conditions requiring emergency medical care, these conditions are selected as the primary cause of death, with COVID-19 being recorded in part II of the certificate.
Conclusion. To provide reliable statistical information about mortality rates, executive authorities require the primary medical documentation filed in strict accordance with established rules.
Professional reviews
PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY OF INFECTION CAUSED BY SARS-COV-2
Abstract
Original study articles
CURRENT SITUATION OF CHILD ABUSE IN JAPAN AND EFFORTS TO OBTAIN OBJECTIVE EVIDENCE OF BRUISING FROM CHILD ABUSE
Abstract
EVALUATION OF EXTRAGENITAL INJURIES IN FEMALE CHILDREN WITH SEXUAL ABUSE
Abstract
The article reports results of a study of extragenital injuries in female children.
Aim. Applied forensic evaluation of extragenital injuries in female children offended by sexual abuse.
Material and methods. The study sample contained 517 observations, with 245 representing children suffered from physical sexual abuse and 272 — from physical violence without the sexual intention. Only injuries localised outside the genitals were considered. Particularly, we analysed the occurrence frequency of injuries confined to preselected parts of the victim’ body. Statistical significance was estimated with the Kolmogorov — Smirnov test, Mann — Whitney U-test and Сhi-squared test. After estimating the test statistical power, a resulting set of diagnostic coefficients was constructed to assess the practical value of the data.
Conclusion. The estimated diagnostic coefficients provide a forensic medical expert with a probabilistic tool to qualify specific circumstances of extragenital injuries in offended female children in communication with legal authorities.
MORPHOFUNCTIONAL CHANGES IN THE INTERNAL ORGANS IN ANIMAL MODELS INDUCED BY DIPHENHYDRAMINE POISONING
Abstract
The author describes the complex of Dimedrol-induced morphofunctional changes in the internal organs in animal models that possesses a diagnostic potential in forensic cases of fatal poisoning with this drug.
Aim. Studying and specification of the complex morphofunctional pathology of the internal organs in animal models under oral administration of toxic doses of Dimedrol, with the perspective of improving accuracy of forensic diagnosis of antihistamine poisoning with clinical data.
Materials and methods. Studies were conducted on white mongrel rats of both sexes and 180–220 g weight. Poisoning was modelled with pharmacopoeial Dimedrol containing 99.9 % of the active substance.
Results. Morphofunctional criteria are proposed for the differential diagnosis of antihistamine poisoning on the basis of characteristic changes in the microcirculatory bed and histological structure of the internal organs in experimental animals. Putative recommendations are formulated in the forensic diagnosis of death caused by antihistamine poisoning.
Conclusion. The obtained results indicate that the general toxic effect is complemented by pronounced vascular lesions in the genesis of death in cases of antihistamine poisoning at high doses of the administered drug.
Virtopsy
VIRTOPSY IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC
Abstract
Postmortem computer tomography (CT) came into practice of forensic medicine in the 1990s and has later been complemented with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A pioneer virtual autopsy was conducted in Germany in 1983. In the Czech Republic, this examination was first performed in 1993.
A typical examination requires about 30 min, with the most resource-demanding stage being the image data rendering. CT was shown to better capture skeletal structures, while MRI contrasting is superior in terms of visualising soft tissues. In the Czech Republic, CT-based virtopsy is legislated mandatory to document deaths inflicted by gunshots, road traffic and aviation accidents, high falls, occupational and explosive-related injuries, thermal and mechanical traumas, strangulation, drowning as well as to examine unidentified or decomposing bodies, deceased children and adolescents aged under 18.
CT scanning prior to conventional autopsy provides a forensic expert with guidance to reveal pathologies non-invasively in particular regions that are difficult to dissect or access. The advantage of virtopsy is the objective acquisition of data that can be re-examined, reinterpreted or juxtaposed with the results of conventional autopsy and easily recovered for possible further expertise.