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Journal Article

Citation

Rowbotham SK, Blau S, Hislop-Jambrich J, Francis V. Forensic Sci. Med. Pathol. 2018; 14(2): 152-162.

Affiliation

Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine, 65 Kavanagh St, Southbank, Victoria, 3006, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s12024-018-9964-z

PMID

29564724

Abstract

The skeletal blunt force trauma resulting from fatal falls involving stairs is complex. There are countless ways an individual may fall when stairs are involved, and thus a variety of ways the skeleton may fracture. Therefore anecdotally, it may be said that there is no specific skeletal trauma characteristic of this fall type. In order to scientifically investigate this anecdotal understanding, this study provides a detailed investigation of the skeletal fracture patterns and morphologies resulting from fatal falls involving stairs. Skeletal trauma was analyzed using the full-body postmortem computed tomography scans of 57 individuals who died from a fall involving stairs. Trauma was examined in the context of the variables that potentially influence how an individual falls (i.e. sex, age, body mass index, number of stairs involved, psychoactive drugs, pre-existing conditions, landing surface and manner of the fall) using logistic regression. Skeletal trauma primarily occurred in the axial skeleton. An analysis of fracture patterns showed the cranial base was less likely to fracture in younger individuals and the cervical vertebrae were more likely to fracture in falls that involved more than half a flight of stairs. A total of 56 fracture morphologies were identified. Of these, diastatic fractures were less likely to occur in older individuals.

FINDINGS indicate that there are skeletal fracture patterns and morphologies characteristic of a fatal fall involving stairs.


Language: en

Keywords

Autopsy; Blunt force trauma; Bone; Fall involving stairs; Fatal fall; Forensic anthropology; Forensic pathology; Fracture morphology; Fracture pattern; Postmortem computed tomography; Skeletal trauma

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