Cardiothoracic ratio in postmortem chest radiography with regard to the cause of death
Received 17 June 2009; received in revised form 14 October 2009; accepted 19 November 2009. published online 29 January 2010.
Abstract
It is difficult to examine the intact in situ status of thoracic organs, including the heart and lungs, after opening the chest at autopsy. The present study investigated the pathological diagnostic significance of the cardiothoracic ratio (CTR) with regard to heart and lung weight in postmortem plain chest radiography. The pathological diagnostic significance of the CTR in postmortem plain chest radiography using serial forensic autopsy cases of adults (>19years of age, n=367, within 72h postmortem) was retrospectively investigated. In natural deaths, CTR was larger for heart diseases, and was smaller for pulmonary infection and gastrointestinal bleeding, showing correlations to the heart weight except in cases of hemopericardium. In traumatic deaths, CTR was larger in cases of fire fatality and acute methamphetamine intoxication, and varied in cases of blunt injury, showing correlations to the heart weight. However, CTR was smaller for sharp instrument injury and drowning, independently of the heart weight. These findings suggest that postmortem CTR (median, 55.6%, measured using a mobile X-ray apparatus) primarily depends on the heart weight, but is substantially modified during the process of death: the CTR may be enlarged by cardiac dilatation due to terminal congestive heart failure, but may be reduced by inflated lungs in drowning or hypovolemia due to fatal hemorrhage. CTR showed a mild correlation to the right diaphragm level, which was also related to the cause of death, but was independent of the left diaphragm level. Plain chest radiographic findings may also be helpful in investigating the pathophysiology of death, and are to some extent comparable with clinical findings. This also suggests the potential usefulness of postmortem CT and MRI for analysis of terminal cardiac function.
aDepartment of Legal Medicine, Osaka City University Medical School, Asahi-machi 1-4-3, Abeno, Osaka 545-8585, Japan
bDepartment of Forensic Pathology, Zhongshan Medical College, Sun Yat-sen University, No. 74, Zhongshan 2 Road, Guangzhou, 510080 Guangdong, China
cDepartment of Forensic Pathology, Sichuan University West China School of Preclinical Medical Science and Forensic Medicine, Chengdu City, 610041 Sichuan, PR China
dDepartment of Forensic Pathology, China Medical University School of Forensic Medicine, No. 92, Beier Road, Heping District, Shenyang, 110001 Liaoning Province, PR China