Author:
Cohen Marta C.,Scheimberg Irene
Abstract
From a forensic pathologist’s perspective, there are several aspects of the perinatal postmortem that are particularly important. If a fetus is found abandoned, the pathologist needs to ascertain the fetal age, the appropriateness of growth, if the baby was born alive or dead, and the possible causes of death. In cases of litigation for perinatal deaths occurring in hospitals, access to the obstetric and neonatal notes (if the baby is born alive and dies a few hours or days later) is fundamental to reach a correct interpretation and conclusion. The most important points to consider in cases of intrapartum death are the roles of asphyxia and trauma in the causation of the baby’s death. Timing of the fetal death in relation to delivery may also be an important point in these cases. Finally, intrapartum lesions should always be considered in the differential diagnosis of possible child abuse in babies aged two months or less.
Subject
Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Reference34 articles.
1. Gilbert-Barnes E, Debich-Spicer DE. Handbook of pediatric autopsy pathology. Totowa (NJ): Humana Press, c2005. Chapter 20, Pediatric forensic pathology; p. 471–98.
2. Siebert JR. Potter’s pathology of the fetus, infant and child 2nd ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2007. Chapter 16, Perinatal, fetal and embryonic autopsy; p. 695–740.
3. Al-Adnani. The pediatric and perinatal autopsy manual. Cambridge (UK): Cambridge University Press, c2014. Chapter 1, Perinatal autopsy, techniques and classification; p. 1–16.
4. Potter EL, Craig JM. Pathology of the fetus and infant. 3rd ed. Chicago: Year Book; c1975. Chapter 2, Rate of antenatal growth; p. 15–24
5. Fetal Radiology
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献