Author:
D’Arcy Colleen,Hazrati Lili-Naz,Chiasson David A.
Abstract
The forensic pathologist responsible for sudden unexpected death (SUD) investigation in the pediatric setting faces many challenges. It usually takes many years to obtain reasonable experience and exposure to the wide variety of diseases that may present as SUD in a pediatric context, and to appreciate the differences in the etiology and clinical context between the pediatric and adult SUD setting. In pediatric SUD, it is necessary to conduct a systematic, pediatric-focused autopsy investigation including extensive histopathological assessment and ancillary testing. Postmortem histologic findings in the context of SUD in the pediatric population are often subtle and distinctly different from those seen in the adult population. The pathologist must have an understanding of both developmental and pathological processes in order to correctly interpret the findings during a pediatric autopsy. A system-based, histopathology-focused review of common entities, normal variants, and incidental findings that can prove challenging will be discussed. For the forensic pathologist tasked with pediatric SUD autopsies, development of a strong collaborative relationship with a pediatric pathologist and/or neuropathologist to assist with histopathological analysis is strongly endorsed.
Subject
Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Reference20 articles.
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