Frozen (iced) effect on postmortem CT – Experimental evaluation

Publication date: December 2015 Source:Journal of Forensic Radiology and Imaging, Volume 3, Issue 4 Author(s): Hideki Hyodoh, Keishi Ogura, Miyu Sugimoto, Yuya Suzuki, Ayumi Kanazawa, Rina Murakami, Junya Shimizu, Masumi Rokukawa, Shunichiro Okazaki, Keisuke Mizuo, Satoshi Watanabe The aim of this study is to experimentally evaluate the computed tomography (CT) attenuation of water, saline, iced saline and water ice cubes in order to relate these measurements to low density findings of cadavers on PMCT. Comparing the fluids with the iced materials, the CT number was lower in iced (frozen, with gas) saline (fNaCl) and ice cubes (frozen, without gas) (fH2O) than in saline (NaCl) and tap water (H2O). The fNaCl, which contained small air bubbles, presented significant lower CT number than fH2O. The fNaCl and fH2O showed around −80HU and the values were concordant with the theoretical result. In cases where low density is found when a cadaver is undergoing a CT examination at low temperature, including the freezing effect as a new differential diagnosis could result in more accurate PMCT interpretation.
Source: Journal of Forensic Radiology and Imaging - Category: Radiology Source Type: research