Cohen Philip R, Prahlow Joseph A
Dermatology, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, USA.
Dermatology, Touro University California College of Osteopathic Medicine, Vallejo, USA.
Cureus. 2025 Aug 4;17(8):e89375. doi: 10.7759/cureus.89375. eCollection 2025 Aug.
Postmortem tanning, previously referred to as either postmortem suntan or postmortem sunburn, presents as hyperpigmentation of sun-exposed uncovered skin. It most commonly occurs in decedents who remain in an environment in which the ambient temperature is either warm or hot; the areas of the corpse that are exposed to the sun develop hyperpigmentation. This postmortem change usually appears in the fresh (first) stage of decomposition. We describe three decedents who developed postmortem tanning. One of the women has an extensive severe darkening of her skin in the distribution where her skin was exposed to sunlight. The second woman had a localized band of pronounced tanning on her lower abdomen; associated early decomposition had occurred, including skin slippage and possible marbling of the superficial veins, at the location of the tanning. The third case, a young man, showed the concurrent presence of keratosis pilaris on his extensor arms that were affected by the tanning. In contrast to livor mortis, postmortem tanning occurs on the skin that is located on the non-dependent side of the body, those areas most apt to be exposed to sunlight. In living individuals, melanogenesis-associated tanning is usually an oxygen-dependent process. In decedents, blood flow and oxygen delivery to the skin that becomes darkened/hyperpigmented is not mandatory. Areas for future investigation include description of the histologic appearance of the tanned skin in comparison to adjacent, non-tanned skin, the incidence of postmortem tanning, the factors that may accelerate or decelerate the occurrence of postmortem tanning, and the possible correlation of the appearance of postmortem tanning as a feature that can be used to reveal information for estimating the postmortem interval.
尸斑,以前被称为尸斑晒黑或尸斑晒伤,表现为暴露于阳光下的未覆盖皮肤的色素沉着。它最常见于处于温暖或炎热环境中的死者;尸体暴露于阳光下的部位会出现色素沉着。这种死后变化通常出现在新鲜(第一)阶段的分解过程中。我们描述了三名出现尸斑晒黑的死者。其中一名女性皮肤暴露于阳光下的部位出现广泛严重的色素沉着。第二名女性下腹部有一条局部明显的晒黑带;在晒黑部位同时出现了早期分解,包括皮肤脱落和浅表静脉可能出现的大理石样斑纹。第三个病例是一名年轻男性,其受晒黑影响的伸臂上同时存在毛发角化病。与尸斑不同,尸斑晒黑发生在身体非下垂侧的皮肤上,即最容易暴露于阳光下的部位。在活体中,与黑色素生成相关的晒黑通常是一个依赖氧气的过程。在死者中,血液流动和向变黑/色素沉着皮肤的氧气输送并非必需。未来的研究领域包括描述晒黑皮肤与相邻未晒黑皮肤的组织学外观、尸斑晒黑的发生率、可能加速或减缓尸斑晒黑发生的因素,以及尸斑晒黑外观作为一种可用于揭示估计死后间隔信息的特征的可能相关性。