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Journal Article

Citation

Zivković V, Nikolic S. Med. Sci. Law 2018; 58(1): 62-66.

Affiliation

Institute of Forensic Medicine, University of Belgrade - School of Medicine, Serbia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, British Academy of Forensic Sciences, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0025802417739163

PMID

29087244

Abstract

We present the case of a 64-year-old woman who committed suicide by jumping from the open bedroom window of her second-floor apartment. However, during a head-first fall, the victim's head was caught perpendicularly between two parallel metal strands of wire, used for drying laundry, on the first-floor window. This led to a 180° rotation of the body around the lower part of the neck, bringing the victim's body into the legs-first position. This chain of events also caused short-term neck strangulation, for fractions of a second or a couple of seconds, which caused rupture of the peripheral venules and apparent neck, facial and conjunctival haemorrhages, above the level of strangulation ligature - the metal strands of wire. The presented case shows that even such incomplete, very short-term neck strangulation could raise venous/capillary pressure sufficiently to cause petechial haemorrhages on the neck and face above the level of ligature.


Language: en

Keywords

Petechiae; asphyxia; conjunctival haemorrhages; facial haemorrhages; strangulation

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