Provincial Forensic Pathology Unit, Ontario Forensic Pathology Service, Forensic Services and Coroners Complex, 25 Morton Shulman Avenue, Toronto, Ontario M3M 0B1, Canada; Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, 1 King's College Circle, 6th Floor, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada.
Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, 1 King's College Circle, 6th Floor, Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A8, Canada.
Forensic Sci Int. 2021 May;322:110755. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2021.110755. Epub 2021 Mar 17.
Over a year after the initial emergence of the disease, the COVID-19 pandemic continues to strain healthcare systems worldwide. The value of feedback and connection between clinical care, public health, and death investigation systems has never been more clear. To this end, knowledge of the radiologic and histopathologic features of fatal COVID-19 is critical for those working with the living and the dead. Most of the medical descriptions of COVID-19 are either focused on clinical in vivo medical imaging or autopsies performed following an intensive course of treatment over days to weeks prior to death, rather than deaths in the community prior to hospitalization. Here we report the postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) and lung histopathology in five fatal cases of COVID-19 that were subject to medicolegal death investigation. All individuals died in the community without medical treatment, or after a brief terminal admission to hospital. In these cases, the main PMCT findings included: diffuse lung changes including ground glass-type opacifications, a "crazy paving" appearance, variable areas of more dense consolidation, and relatively few areas of spared/less involved lung parenchyma. The unifying histopathology was diffuse alveolar damage in various stages of cellular evolution. In all cases, the pattern of PMCT and the lung histopathology corroborated the diagnosis of COVID-19. We propose the routine use of PMCT as a potential screening tool for the identification of COVID-19 related fatalities in the medicolegal setting where a paucity of historical information may not otherwise permit the identification of this disease prior to autopsy.
在疾病最初出现一年多后,COVID-19 大流行继续给全球的医疗系统带来压力。临床护理、公共卫生和死亡调查系统之间的反馈和联系的价值从未如此明显。为此,了解 COVID-19 的放射和组织病理学特征对于与生者和死者打交道的人至关重要。大多数关于 COVID-19 的医学描述要么专注于临床体内医学成像,要么是在死亡前数天到数周内进行强化治疗后进行的尸检,而不是在社区中没有住院治疗就死亡。在这里,我们报告了五例 COVID-19 致命病例的死后计算机断层扫描(PMCT)和肺组织病理学,这些病例都经过法医死亡调查。所有个体都在没有医疗救治的情况下或在短暂的临终住院后在社区中死亡。在这些情况下,主要的 PMCT 发现包括:弥漫性肺部改变,包括磨玻璃样混浊、“疯狂铺路石”外观、不同程度的更致密实变区以及相对较少的保留/较少受累的肺实质区。统一的组织病理学是各种细胞演变阶段的弥漫性肺泡损伤。在所有情况下,PMCT 的模式和肺组织病理学都证实了 COVID-19 的诊断。我们建议常规使用 PMCT 作为法医环境中识别 COVID-19 相关死亡的潜在筛选工具,在这种情况下,缺乏历史信息可能无法在尸检前识别这种疾病。