Essentials of Autopsy Practice: Recent Advances, Topics and Developments

Front Cover
Guy N. Rutty
Springer Science & Business Media, 2001 - Autopsy - 228 pages
Within the last century, the number of permission hospital autopsies has declined with the result that medico-legal autopsies have become the predominant form of post-mortem examination. This decline has resulted in a shortage of permission autopsies for training, therefore pathologists today may embark on their professional careers with considerably less experience in autopsy work than their predecessors, and yet as most of the autopsies they will perform will be medico-legal in nature, they may find themselves potentially out of their depth. This book is intended to be a reference to assist all involved in post-mortem and bereavement work. It features general information for the trainee, more specialist areas for consultants, and specific subjects for the specialist. The topics have been chosen in areas which commonly cause difficulty in interpretation for many pathologists. -- Publisher description.

From inside the book

Contents

Religious Attitudes to Death What Every Pathologist Needs to Know Part 2
The Investigation of Inherited Metabolic Disease After Death
13
The Disputed Death
41
The Maternal Death
69
The Pathology of Shock Versus Postmortem Change
89
Radiological Investigations in Autopsy Practice
125
Body Art and Modification
155
The Incised Wound
183
Index
217
Copyright

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