Pathological findings in kidney in medicolegal autopsies: A study


Original Article

Author Details : Soibam Neha*, TH. Meera Devi, Gayatri Devi Pukhrambam, A Haricharan

Volume : 8, Issue : 1, Year : 2021

Article Page : 33-38

https://doi.org/10.18231/j.ijfcm.2021.007



Suggest article by email

Abstract

Most of the chronic kidney diseases will not produce any symptoms till it reaches an advanced stage. In medicolegal autopsies most of the cases are brought with an unknown pathology. This cross sectional study was conducted to assess the gross and histopathological findings of kidney in medicolegal autopsies in the Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology of a tertiary care teaching institute in Imphal from 2018 to 2020. Kidney samples from a total of 170 medicolegal cases, comprising of 135 males and 35 females (M:F = 3.8:1), were examined. The prevalence of kidney findings in the present study was 77%. The
commonest kidney pathology encountered was tubular necrosis (51.8%) followed by glomerulosclerosis (15.9%). Acute tubular necrosis was found more commonly in deaths due to trauma resulting in shock, haemorrhage and asphyxia. Incidental findings included a case of right solitary kidney and a rare case of right crossed fused renal ectopia. Even though these conditions of the kidneys were not directly responsible for the death of the individuals, they could have contributed to these deaths up to some extent.

Keywords: Medicolegal autopsy, Kidney pathology, Histopathological examination.


How to cite : Neha S , Devi T M , Pukhrambam G D , Haricharan A , Pathological findings in kidney in medicolegal autopsies: A study. Indian J Forensic Community Med 2021;8(1):33-38


This is an Open Access (OA) journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.







Article History

Received : 20-01-2021

Accepted : 22-02-2021


View Article

PDF File   Full Text Article


Downlaod

PDF File   XML File   ePub File


Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Article DOI

https://doi.org/10.18231/j.ijfcm.2021.007


Article Metrics






Article Access statistics

Viewed: 3373

PDF Downloaded: 555



Medical Abbreviation List