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Journal Article

Citation

Jayaprakash K, Pillay VV. J. Forensic Med. Toxicol. 1999; 16(1): 38-39.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Department of Forensic Medicine)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Death in hanging may be caused by various mechanisms including asphyxia, cervical, vasculature occlusion, and fractures of cervical spine with spinal cord injury. While it is true that in some cases of long-drop hanging the bony cervical spine may not really be damaged, the fact that spinal injury almost never occurs in hanging without a drop is extensively documented. However, a few reports have surprisingly indicated cervical injury even in suicidal hanging not associated with a drop. This paper reports a case of attempted suicidal hanging resulting in near-death, by an individual whose cervical spine was not only diseased but had in fact been recently operated surgically, and yet remarkably, showed no signs of spinal damage.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; article; asphyxia; blood vessel occlusion; case report; cervical spine fracture; cervical spine injury; clinical feature; hanging; human; male; spinal cord injury; spine surgery; suicide attempt; tuberculous spondylitis

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