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Legal Medicine 2020-May

Pulmonary Postmortem Computed Tomography of Bacterial Pneumonia and Pulmonary Edema in Patients Following Non-Traumatic In-Hospital Death

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Wataru Gonoi
Yusuke Watanabe
Go Shirota
Hiroyuki Abe
Hidemi Okuma
Yukako Shintani-Domoto
Taku Tajima
Masashi Fukayama
Osamu Abe
Masanori Ishida

Nyckelord

Abstrakt

In this study, we compared the postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) findings among nonpathological lungs, lungs with bacterial pneumonia, and lungs with pulmonary edema in patients following non-traumatic in-hospital death. We studied 104 consecutive adult patients (208 lungs) who died in our tertiary care hospital and underwent PMCT and pathological autopsy (both within 2.5 days after death), and were pathologically diagnosed with nonpathological lungs, bacterial pneumonia, and pulmonary edema. Thirteen pulmonary features were assessed on the CT scans. We also examined the association between the time elapsed since death and the pulmonary findings. We observed increased lung opacities with horizontal plane formation, diffuse opacities, diffuse bronchovascular bundle thickening, symmetric opacities to the contralateral lung, and decreased segmental opacities with time elapsed since death (Cochran-Armitage test for trend). Multiple logistic regression revealed that the presence of opacities without horizontal plane formation or centrilobular opacities, and the absence of diffuse bronchovascular bundle thickening were associated with histopathological pneumonia, whereas the presence of opacities with horizontal plane formation, diffuse opacities, and interlobular septal thickening were associated with histopathological pulmonary edema. In conclusion, specific pulmonary PMCT findings increased with time elapsed since death, and some lung findings may facilitate the diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia and pulmonary edema.

Keywords: Bacterial infection; Chest radiology; Forensic radiology; Lung disease; Postmortem imaging.

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