Dictionary Definition
autopsy n : an examination and dissection of a
dead body to determine cause of death or the changes produced by
disease [syn: necropsy,
postmortem, PM, postmortem
examination] v : perform an autopsy on a dead body; do a
post-mortem
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A dissection performed on a cadaver to find possible cause(s) of death.
- An after-the-fact examination, especially of the causes of a failure.
Synonyms
Usage notes
Translations
a dissection performed on a cadaver
- Albanian: autopsi
- Croatian: autopsija, obdukcija
- Danish: autopsi, obduktion
- Dutch: autopsie
- French: autopsie
- German: Autopsie
- Japanese: 検死 (kenshi)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: تهشریح
- Polish: autopsja
- Portuguese: autópsia
- Swedish: obduktion
carry out a personal inspection
- Croatian: autopsija
Verb
- To perform an autopsy on.
- To perform an after-the-fact analysis of, especially of a failure.
Translations
Extensive Definition
An autopsy, also known as a post-mortem
examination, necropsy, or obduction, is a medical
procedure that consists of a thorough examination of a corpse to
determine the cause and manner of death and to evaluate any disease or injury that may be present. It is
usually performed by a specialized medical doctor called a pathologist.
Autopsies are either performed for legal or
medical purposes. A forensic autopsy is carried out when the cause
of death may be a criminal matter, while a clinical or academic
autopsy is performed to find the medical cause of death and is used
in cases of unknown or uncertain death, or for research purposes.
Autopsies can be further classified into cases where external
examination suffices, and those where the body is dissected and an
internal examination is conducted. Permission from next of kin
may be required for internal autopsy in some cases. Once an
internal autopsy is complete the body is reconstituted by sewing it
back together.
The prefix 'auto-' means 'self', and so autopsy
means 'to see for oneself'; it is used more broadly of personal
examination of an object, as well as its specific usage for the
post-mortem examination of a human corpse.
History
The Egyptians were one of the first civilizations to practice the removal and examination of the internal organs of humans.http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/egypt/dailylife/medicine.htmlValue of autopsy in medicine
Autopsies are important in clinical medicine as they can identify medical error and assist continuous improvement.A study that focused on myocardial
infarction (heart attack) as a cause of death found significant
errors of omission and commission, i.e. a sizable number cases
ascribed to myocardial infarctions (MIs) were not MIs and a
significant number of non-MIs were actually MIs.
A systematic
review of studies of the autopsy calculated that in about 25%
of autopsies a major diagnostic error will be revealed. However,
this rate has decreased over time and the study projects that in a
contemporary US institution, 8.4% to 24.4% of autopsies will detect
major diagnostic errors.
A large meta-analysis
suggested that approximately one third of death
certificates are incorrect and that half of the autopsies
performed produced findings that were not suspected before the
person died. Also, it is thought that over one fifth of unexpected
findings can only be diagnosed histologically, i.e. by
biopsy or autopsy, and
that approximately one quarter of unexpected findings, or 5% of all
findings, are major and can similarly only be diagnosed from
tissue.
Value of autopsy in intensive care unit
One study found 32% major diagnostic errors (Class I and Class II) with the leading missed diagnoses being "Autopsies revealed 171 missed diagnoses, including 21 cancers, 12 strokes, 11 myocardial infarctions, 10 pulmonary emboli, and 9 endocarditis, among others".Focusing intubated patients, one study found
"abdominal pathologic conditions--abscesses, bowel perforations, or
infarction--were as frequent as pulmonary emboli as a cause of
class I errors. While patients with abdominal pathologic conditions
generally complained of abdominal pain, results of examination of
the abdomen were considered unremarkable in most patients, and the
symptom was not pursued".
General information
The term "autopsy" derives from the Greek for
"to see oneself". "Necropsy" is from the Greek for "seeing a dead
body".
There are three main types of autopsies:
- Forensic: This is done for medical-legal purposes, and is the one that is normally seen on television or in the news. This type depict an extensive methodology and tends to be complete and comprehensive. No family permission is required to complete this type of autopsy.
- Clinical/academic: This is usually performed in hospitals for research and study purposes. Prior to the start, of a clinical autopsy, a cause of death must have already been established, and a death certificate completed. This usually is as comprehensive as it needs to be adequate. To complete this type of autopsy, permission from the deceased's legal next of kin is required.
- Coroner's: In Great Britain this type of autopsy encompasses cases where no medical cause of death is readily available. Cause, manner and mechanism of death are in question. Eventually, the prosectors will identify whether the cases deserve comprehensive forensic autopsy or a routine postmortem. In the United States, each state has a set of guidelines defining a "coroner's case" for autopsy, for example: hospital deaths occurring within 24 hours of admission or within 24 hours of a major surgical procedure, with any history (current or remote) of illegal drug or alcohol abuse by the deceased, patients with certain communicable diseases (HIV, hepatitis C virus, etc.), patients with any previous history of violent injury (e.g., gunshot wound many years before death). These cases may or may not be also considered "forensic" in nature. They may be done by the hospital pathologist with the legal permission of the coroner or medical examiner for that county/parish and do not require permission from the deceased's legal next of kin.
While dissection of human remains
for medical reasons has been practiced irregularly for nearly a
millennium since Avenzoar and
Ibn
al-Nafis, the modern autopsy process derives from the anatomists of the Renaissance.
The two great nineteenth-century
medical researchers Rudolf
Virchow and Carl
von Rokitansky built on the Renaissance legacy to derive the
two distinct autopsy techniques that still bear their names. Their
demonstration of correspondences between pathological conditions in
dead bodies and symptoms and illnesses in the
living opened the way for a different way of thinking about
disease and its
treatment. In China, the office of
coroner and forensic
autopsy have a history nearly two thousand years old.
Forensic autopsy
A forensic autopsy is used to determine the cause of death. Forensic science involves the application of the sciences to answer questions of interest to the legal system. In United States law, deaths are placed in one of five manners:In some jurisdictions, the Undetermined category
may include deaths in
absentia, such as deaths at sea and missing persons declared
dead in a court of law; in others, such deaths are classified under
"Other".
Following an in-depth examination of all the
evidence, a medical
examiner or coroner will
assign a manner of death as one of the five listed above; and
detail the evidence on the mechanism of the death.
Clinical autopsy
Clinical autopsies serve two major purposes. They are performed to gain more insight into pathological processes and determine what factors contributed to a patient's death. More importantly, autopsies are performed to ensure the standard of care at hospitals. Autopsies can yield insight into how patient deaths can be prevented in the future.Within the United Kingdom, clinical autopsies can
only be carried out with the consent of the family of the deceased
person as opposed to a medico-legal autopsy instructed by a Coroner
(England & Wales) or Procurator Fiscal (Scotland) to which the
family cannot object.
The process
The body is received at a medical examiner's office or hospital in a body bag or evidence sheet. A brand new body bag is used for each body to ensure that only evidence from that body is contained within the bag. Evidence sheets are an alternate way to transport the body. An evidence sheet is a sterile sheet that the body is covered in when it is moved. If it is believed there may be any significant residue on the hands, for instance gunpowder, a separate paper sack is put around each hand and taped shut around the wrist.There are two parts to the physical examination
of the body: the external and internal examination. Toxicology,
biochemical
tests and/or genetic
testing often supplement these and frequently assist the
pathologist in
assigning the cause or causes of death.
External examination
The person responsible for handling, cleaning and moving the body is often called a diener, the German word for servant. In the UK this role is performed by an Anatomical Pathology Technologist who will also assist the pathologist in eviscerating the deceased and reconstruction after the autopsy. After the body is received, it is first photographed. The examiner then notes the kind of clothes and their position on the body before they are removed. Next, any evidence such as residue, flakes of paint or other material is collected from the external surfaces of the body. Ultraviolet light may also be used to search body surfaces for any evidence not easily visible to the naked eye. Samples of hair, nails and the like are taken, and the body may also be radiographically imaged.Once the external evidence is collected, the body
is removed from the bag, undressed and any wounds present are examined. The
body is then cleaned, weighed and measured in preparation for the
internal examination. The scale used
to weigh the body is often designed to accommodate the cart that the body is transported
on; its weight is then deducted from the total weight shown to give
the weight of the body.
If not already within an autopsy room, the body
is transported to one and placed on a table. A general description
of the body as regards ethnicity, sex, age, hair color and
length, eye
color and other distinguishing features (birthmarks, old scar tissue,
moles,
etc) is then made. A handheld voice
recorder or a standard examination form is normally used to
record this information. In some countries e.g. France, Germany and
Canada to name but a few, an autopsy may comprise an external
examination only. This concept is sometimes termed a "view and
grant". The principles behind this being that the medical records,
history of the deceased and circumstances of death have all
indicated as to the cause and manner of death without the need for
an internal examination.
Internal examination
If not already in place, a plastic or rubber
brick called a "body block" is placed under the back of the body,
causing the arms and neck to fall backward whilst stretching and
pushing the chest upward
to make it easier to cut open. This gives the prosector, a pathologist or
assistant, maximum exposure to the trunk. After this is
done, the internal examination begins. The internal examination
consists of inspecting the internal
organs of the body for evidence of trauma or
other indications of the cause of death. For the internal
examination there are a number of different approaches
available:
- a large and deep Y-shaped incision can be made from behind each ear and running down the sides of the neck, meeting at the breastbone. This is the approach most often used in forensic autopsies so as to allow maximum exposure of the neck structures for later detailed examination. This could prove essential in cases of suspected strangulation
- a T-shaped incision made from the tips of both shoulder, in a horizontal line across the region of the collar bones to meet at the sternum (breastbone) in the middle. This initial cut is used more often to produce a more aesthetic finish to the body when it is re-constituted as stitching marks will not be as apparent as with a Y-shaped incision
- a single vertical cut is made from the middle of the neck (in the region of the 'adam's apple' on a male body)
In all of the above cases the cut then extends
all the way down to the pubic bone
(making a deviation to the left side of the navel).
Bleeding from the
cuts is minimal, or non-existent, due to the fact that the pull of
gravity is producing the
only blood
pressure at this point, related directly to the complete lack
of cardiac functionality. However, in certain cases there is
anecdotal evidence to prove that bleeding can be quite profuse,
especially in cases of drowning.
An electric saw dubbed a "Stryker saw" after a
common manufacturer of
the tool, is most often used to open the chest
cavity. However, in some cases, due to the large amount of dust
created when the bone is cut by the saw, shears are used to open
the chest cavity. It is also possible to utilise a simple scalpel
blade. The prosector uses the tool to saw through the ribs on the
lateral sides of the chest cavity to allow the sternum and attached ribs to be
lifted as one chest plate; this is done so that the heart and lungs
can be seen in situ and that
the heart, in particular the pericardial
sac is not damaged or disturbed from opening. A scalpel is used to remove any
soft tissue that is still attached to the posterior side of the
chest plate. Now the lungs
and the heart are exposed. The chest plate is set aside and will be
eventually replaced at the end of the autopsy.
At this stage the organs
are exposed. Usually, the organs are removed in a systematic
fashion. Making a decision as to what order the organs are to be
removed will depend highly on the case in question. Organs can be
removed in several ways: The first is the en masse technique of
letulle whereby all the organs are removed as one large mass. The
second is the en bloc method of Ghon. The most popular in the UK is
a modified version of this method which is divided into four groups
of organs. Although these are the two predominant evisceration
techniques in the UK variations on these are widespread.
One method is described here: The pericardial sac
is opened to view the heart. Blood for chemical analysis may be
removed from the inferior vena cava or the pulmonary veins. Before
removing the heart, the pulmonary artery is opened in order to
search for a blood clot. The heart can then be removed by cutting
the inferior vena cava, the pulmonary veins, the aorta and
pulmonary artery, and the superior vena cava. This method leaves
the aortic arch intact, which will make things easier for the
embalmer. The left lung is then easily accessible and can be
removed by cutting the bronchus, artery, and vein at the hilum. The
right lung can then be similarly removed. The abdominal organs can
be removed one by one after first examining their relationships and
vessels.
Some pathologists, however, prefer to remove the
organs all in one "block". Then a series of cuts, along the
vertebral column, are made so that the organs can be detached and
pulled out in one piece for further inspection and sampling. During
autopsies of infants, this method is used almost all of the time.
The various organs are examined, weighed and tissue samples in the
form of slices are taken. Even major blood
vessels are cut open and inspected at this stage. Next the
stomach and intestinal
contents are examined and weighed. This could be useful to find the
cause and time of death, due to the natural passage of food through
the bowel during digestion. The more area empty, the longer the
deceased had gone without a meal before death.
The body block that was used earlier to elevate
the chest cavity is now used to elevate the head. To examine the
brain, a cut is made from
behind one ear, over the crown of the head, to a point behind the
other ear. When the autopsy is completed, the incision can be neatly sewn up
and is not noticed when the head is resting on a pillow in an open
casket funeral. The
scalp is pulled away from
the skull in two flaps
with the front flap going over the face and the rear flap over the
back of the neck. The skull is then cut with an electric saw
to create a "cap" that can be pulled off, exposing the brain. The
brain is then observed in situ. Then the brain's connection to the
spinal
cord is severed, and the brain is then lifted out of the skull
for further examination. If the brain needs to be preserved before
being inspected, it is contained in a large container of formalin (15 percent solution
of formaldehyde gas
in buffered water) for at
least two but preferably four weeks. This not only preserves the
brain, but also makes it firmer allowing easier handling without
corrupting the tissue.
Reconstitution of the body
An important component of the autopsy is the reconstitution of the body such that it can be viewed, if desired, by relatives of the deceased following the procedure. After the examination, the body has an open and empty chest cavity with chest flaps open on both sides, the top of the skull is missing, and the skull flaps are pulled over the face and neck. It is unusual to examine the face, arms, hands or legs internally. In the UK, following the Human Tissue Act 2004 all organs and tissue must be returned to the body unless permission is given by the family to retain any tissue for further investigation. Normally the internal body cavity is lined with cotton wool or an appropriate material, the organs are then placed into a plastic bag to prevent leakage and returned to the body cavity. The chest flaps are then closed and sewn back together and the skull cap is sewed back in place. Then the body may be wrapped in a shroud and it is common for relatives of the deceased to not be able to tell the procedure has been done when the deceased is viewed in a funeral parlor after embalming.Other information
The principal aim of an autopsy is to determine the cause of death, the state of health of the person before he or she died, and whether any medical diagnosis and treatment before death was appropriate.In most Western
countries the number of autopsies performed in hospitals has
been decreasing every year since 1955. Critics, including pathologist and former
JAMA editor George
Lundberg, have charged that the reduction in autopsies is
negatively affecting the care delivered in hospitals, because when
mistakes result in death, they are often not investigated and
lessons learned.
When a person has given permission in advance of
their death, autopsies may also be carried out for the purposes of
teaching or medical research.
An autopsy is frequently performed in cases of
sudden death, where a doctor is not able to write a death
certificate, or when death is believed to be due to an unnatural
cause. These examinations are performed under a legal authority
(Medical Examiner or Coroner or
Procurator Fiscal) and do not require the consent of relatives of
the deceased. The most extreme example is the examination of
murder victims,
especially when medical examiners are looking for signs of death or
the murder method, such as bullet wounds and exit points,
signs of strangulation, or traces
of poison.
References
External links
- Autopsy - Autopsy - Who gets autopsied?, Autopsy permission, Autopsy technique
- Autopsy - a detailed description by a pathologist complete with cartoon figures.
- The Virtual Autopsy - a site from the University of Leicester where one examines the patient, looks at the (medical) history and gets a try at the diagnosis.
- HBO's Autopsy - a series on HBO about forensics and autopsies.
- BBC News - Controversial Autopsy goes ahead - news story about Prof. Gunther von Hagens performing the first public autopsy in the UK in 170 years.
- How Stuff Works - Autopsies
- Autopsies - Forensic
- President Abraham Lincoln's Autopsy.
- www.autopsyvideo.com- This site offers autopsy documentaries, one produced with the aid of The LA County Coroner's Office.
- Autopsy of a Murder - An interactive exploration of a murder scene and the science involved in a criminalistic investigation: autopsy and laboratory expertise. Produced by the Montreal Science Centre for its namesake exhibition.
- Prevention of Infection during autopsy It lists the risk factors and prevention strategies during post mortem examination.
- http://www.aaptuk.org - The official organisation for Anatomical Pathology Technologists in the UK
autopsy in Bosnian: Autopsija
autopsy in Bulgarian: Аутопсия
autopsy in Czech: Pitva
autopsy in Danish: Obduktion
autopsy in German: Leichenschau
autopsy in Modern Greek (1453-): Νεκροψία
autopsy in Spanish: Autopsia
autopsy in Basque: Autopsia
autopsy in French: Autopsie
autopsy in Galician: Autopsia
autopsy in Indonesian: Otopsi
autopsy in Inuktitut: ᑐᖁᖓᔪᒥᒃ
ᖃᐅᔨᓴᕐᓂᖅ/tuqungajumik qaujisarniq
autopsy in Italian: Autopsia
autopsy in Hebrew: נתיחה שלאחר המוות
autopsy in Hungarian: Autopsia
autopsy in Dutch: Autopsie
autopsy in Japanese: 検死
autopsy in Norwegian: Obduksjon
autopsy in Polish: Sekcja zwłok
autopsy in Portuguese: Autópsia
autopsy in Russian: Аутопсия
autopsy in Slovak: Pitva
autopsy in Serbian: Аутопсија
autopsy in Finnish: Ruumiinavaus
autopsy in Swedish: Obduktion
autopsy in Thai: การชันสูตรพลิกศพ
autopsy in Turkish: Otopsi
autopsy in Yiddish: פאלמעסונג
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
canvass, check, check out, check over,
check up on, coroner,
examine, give an
examination, go over, inquest, inspect, look at, look over,
medical examiner, monitor, mortality committee,
necropsy, necroscopy, observe, overhaul, overlook, pass over, pass under
review, peer at, peruse,
pore over, post, postmortem, postmortem
examination, review, run
over, scan, scrutinize, set an
examination, size, size up,
study, survey, take stock of, take the
measure