Journal & Issues

Volume 28 (2022): Issue s1 (December 2022)

Volume 28 (2022): Issue 1 (November 2022)

Volume 27 (2021): Issue 1 (December 2021)

Volume 26 (2020): Issue 1 (June 2020)

Volume 25 (2019): Issue 1 (June 2019)

Volume 24 (2018): Issue 1 (June 2018)

Volume 23 (2017): Issue 1 (June 2017)

Volume 22 (2016): Issue 2 (December 2016)

Volume 22 (2016): Issue 1 (June 2016)

Volume 21 (2015): Issue 2 (December 2015)

Volume 20 (2014): Issue 2 (December 2014)

Volume 20 (2014): Issue 1 (June 2014)

Volume 19 (2013): Issue 2 (December 2013)

Volume 19 (2013): Issue 1 (May 2013)

Volume 18 (2012): Issue 2 (December 2012)

Volume 18 (2012): Issue 1 (July 2012)

Journal Details
Format
Journal
eISSN
2353-0707
First Published
19 Jul 2012
Publication timeframe
2 times per year
Languages
English

Search

Volume 23 (2017): Issue 1 (June 2017)

Journal Details
Format
Journal
eISSN
2353-0707
First Published
19 Jul 2012
Publication timeframe
2 times per year
Languages
English

Search

0 Articles
Open Access

Mechanical vs. Medical Restraint in Psychiatric Complaint Cases

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 1 - 2

Abstract

Open Access

Fatal Cervical Spine Injury Following a Bicycle Crash

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 3 - 6

Abstract

Abstract

Spinal injury following direct loading of the head and neck is a rare sequel of bicycle crashes. Fatal head injuries following bicycle crashes have been described in great detail and safety measures such as bicycle helmets have been developed accordingly. Less frequently, however, potentially severe cervical spine injuries have been described. We present the case of a middle-aged female who sustained an ultimately fatal cervical spine injury following a collision with a car whilst biking wearing a helmet. We discuss the literature regarding the protective effects of bicycle helmets, the relevance to cervical spine injury and legislation on mandatory use of helmets for injury prevention.

Keywords

  • fatal bicycle trauma
  • bicycle helmet
  • road traffic crash
  • cervical spine injury
  • medicolegal autopsy
  • post-mortem computed tomography
Open Access

Analytical Profiling of Airplane Wastewater - a New Matrix for Mapping Worldwide Patterns of Drug Use and Abuse

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 7 - 12

Abstract

Abstract

There is limited knowledge on the global prescription and consumption patterns of therapeutic (TD) and illicit drugs (ID). Pooled urine analysis and wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has been used for local-based drug screening. It is, however, difficult to study the global epidemiology due to difficulties in obtaining samples. The aims of the study were to test the detectability of TD and ID in airplane wastewater samples categorized according to their geographical origin.

Wastewater samples (n= 17) were collected from long-distance flights and prepared with enzymatic conjugate cleaving followed by either precipitation or solid phase extraction. Aliquots were analysed on various liquid chromatography – mass spectrometers. TDs were grouped according to their Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) codes.

Identification confidence was assigned to three levels based on variables including detection on multiple instruments and number of targets per compound. A total of 424 compounds were identified across all samples, distributed on 87 unique TD and 2 ID. Two principal components in a principal component analysis separated three clusters of wastewater samples corresponding to geographical origin of the airplanes with therapeutic subgroup ATC codes as variables. Airplane wastewater analysis is useful for identifying targets for WBE and toxicological analysis and explore drug use and abuse patterns.

Keywords

  • wastewater profiling
  • drug screening
  • LC-MS
  • wastewater-based epidemiology
  • principal component analysis
Open Access

The death of a medieval Danish warrior. A case of bone trauma interpretation

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 13 - 20

Abstract

Abstract

In 1934 a grave was found in the church ruins of the Cistercian Abbey at Øm in central Jutland, Denmark (founded in 1172, demolished 1561 AD). The grave contained the skeletal remains of an individual lying in a supine position with the head towards the west. The anthropological analysis revealed that the remains belonged to a young male, aged 25-30 years at death and approximately 162.7 cm tall. He had 9 perimortem sharp force lesions, five of which were cranial and four were postcranial, indicating he suffered a violent death in a swordfight.

This paper presents a detailed analysis and description of the individual lesions and their probable effect on the soft tissue, followed by a suggestion for the most likely order of the blows which caused the lesions, and finally a tentative reconstruction of the battle accompanied by photographs. This case illustrates both that forensic pathology can be very useful when applied to an archaeological case and suggests that the forensic pathologist could benefit from examination of ancient cases when interpreting bone lesions in modern cases.

Keywords

  • Forensic anthropology
  • bone lesions
  • medieval Denmark
  • warfare
  • swordfight
  • battle reconstruction
  • sharp force trauma
0 Articles
Open Access

Mechanical vs. Medical Restraint in Psychiatric Complaint Cases

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 1 - 2

Abstract

Open Access

Fatal Cervical Spine Injury Following a Bicycle Crash

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 3 - 6

Abstract

Abstract

Spinal injury following direct loading of the head and neck is a rare sequel of bicycle crashes. Fatal head injuries following bicycle crashes have been described in great detail and safety measures such as bicycle helmets have been developed accordingly. Less frequently, however, potentially severe cervical spine injuries have been described. We present the case of a middle-aged female who sustained an ultimately fatal cervical spine injury following a collision with a car whilst biking wearing a helmet. We discuss the literature regarding the protective effects of bicycle helmets, the relevance to cervical spine injury and legislation on mandatory use of helmets for injury prevention.

Keywords

  • fatal bicycle trauma
  • bicycle helmet
  • road traffic crash
  • cervical spine injury
  • medicolegal autopsy
  • post-mortem computed tomography
Open Access

Analytical Profiling of Airplane Wastewater - a New Matrix for Mapping Worldwide Patterns of Drug Use and Abuse

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 7 - 12

Abstract

Abstract

There is limited knowledge on the global prescription and consumption patterns of therapeutic (TD) and illicit drugs (ID). Pooled urine analysis and wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has been used for local-based drug screening. It is, however, difficult to study the global epidemiology due to difficulties in obtaining samples. The aims of the study were to test the detectability of TD and ID in airplane wastewater samples categorized according to their geographical origin.

Wastewater samples (n= 17) were collected from long-distance flights and prepared with enzymatic conjugate cleaving followed by either precipitation or solid phase extraction. Aliquots were analysed on various liquid chromatography – mass spectrometers. TDs were grouped according to their Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) codes.

Identification confidence was assigned to three levels based on variables including detection on multiple instruments and number of targets per compound. A total of 424 compounds were identified across all samples, distributed on 87 unique TD and 2 ID. Two principal components in a principal component analysis separated three clusters of wastewater samples corresponding to geographical origin of the airplanes with therapeutic subgroup ATC codes as variables. Airplane wastewater analysis is useful for identifying targets for WBE and toxicological analysis and explore drug use and abuse patterns.

Keywords

  • wastewater profiling
  • drug screening
  • LC-MS
  • wastewater-based epidemiology
  • principal component analysis
Open Access

The death of a medieval Danish warrior. A case of bone trauma interpretation

Published Online: 22 Aug 2017
Page range: 13 - 20

Abstract

Abstract

In 1934 a grave was found in the church ruins of the Cistercian Abbey at Øm in central Jutland, Denmark (founded in 1172, demolished 1561 AD). The grave contained the skeletal remains of an individual lying in a supine position with the head towards the west. The anthropological analysis revealed that the remains belonged to a young male, aged 25-30 years at death and approximately 162.7 cm tall. He had 9 perimortem sharp force lesions, five of which were cranial and four were postcranial, indicating he suffered a violent death in a swordfight.

This paper presents a detailed analysis and description of the individual lesions and their probable effect on the soft tissue, followed by a suggestion for the most likely order of the blows which caused the lesions, and finally a tentative reconstruction of the battle accompanied by photographs. This case illustrates both that forensic pathology can be very useful when applied to an archaeological case and suggests that the forensic pathologist could benefit from examination of ancient cases when interpreting bone lesions in modern cases.

Keywords

  • Forensic anthropology
  • bone lesions
  • medieval Denmark
  • warfare
  • swordfight
  • battle reconstruction
  • sharp force trauma