Cockroach: the omnivorous scavenger. Potential misinterpretation of postmortem injuries

Interpretation of postmortem injuries, including their differentiation from those produced antemortem, may be difficult even for experienced forensic pathologists. A variety of animals or insects residing in the death environment may alter the appearance of the deceased. Dictyoptera blattaria (the c...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology 1997-06, Vol.18 (2), p.177-180
Hauptverfasser: Denic, N, Huyer, D W, Sinal, S H, Lantz, P E, Smith, C R, Silver, M M
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container_issue 2
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container_title The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology
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creator Denic, N
Huyer, D W
Sinal, S H
Lantz, P E
Smith, C R
Silver, M M
description Interpretation of postmortem injuries, including their differentiation from those produced antemortem, may be difficult even for experienced forensic pathologists. A variety of animals or insects residing in the death environment may alter the appearance of the deceased. Dictyoptera blattaria (the cockroach) is common in the residential setting. Three cases of sudden and unexpected infant death are presented in which postmortem injuries inflicted by cockroaches initially raised concern of nonaccidental injury. The true nature of the lesions was not recognized by the people at the death scene and, in one case, observation of neck injuries raised suspicion of possible strangulation. In another, the lesions were thought to be burns of different ages. Cockroaches are omnivorous scavengers that devour keratin. They will bite human flesh in both the living and dead with resultant injury. Recognition of cockroach bites will help in the evaluation of injuries discovered during child death investigations.
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The true nature of the lesions was not recognized by the people at the death scene and, in one case, observation of neck injuries raised suspicion of possible strangulation. In another, the lesions were thought to be burns of different ages. Cockroaches are omnivorous scavengers that devour keratin. They will bite human flesh in both the living and dead with resultant injury. 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source MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Animals
Child Abuse - diagnosis
Cockroaches - physiology
Female
Forensic Medicine - methods
Humans
Infant
Insect Bites and Stings - pathology
Male
Postmortem Changes
Skin - pathology
Sudden Infant Death - etiology
Sudden Infant Death - pathology
title Cockroach: the omnivorous scavenger. Potential misinterpretation of postmortem injuries
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