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Dive into the research topics where Ian C. Hood is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian C. Hood.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 1996

Heat-related deaths in Philadelphia - 1993

Haresh G. Mirchandani; Gregory Mcdonald; Ian C. Hood; Carlos A. Fonseca

A study of heat-related deaths associated with the 1993 heat wave in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was conducted. Most of these deaths were in the susceptible elderly with preexisting natural diseases who lived alone without air conditioning in upstairs bedrooms with windows shut, thus creating an even hotter environment. These excessive deaths under such conditions did not meet the standard clinical criteria for hyperthermia because of varying postmortem intervals. Therefore, the authors stress the utility of a postmortem definition of heat-related death to better define the magnitude of health risk posed by hot weather and warn public health and other agencies to take preventative measures.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 1994

Cocaine-induced agitated delirium, forceful struggle, and minor head injury. A further definition of sudden death during restraint.

Haresh G. Mirchandani; Lucy B. Rorke; Adrienne Sekula-Perlman; Ian C. Hood

Four cases from the Philadelphia Medical Examiners Office are presented and the literature is reviewed to define further the syndrome of sudden death occurring during cocaine-induced agitated delirium and struggle during restraint in individuals who also sustain minor head injury. The mechanism of death involves a terminal arrhythmia, most likely due to sympathetic sensitization of the myocardium by cocaine and the stress of struggle sometimes juxtaposed upon the stratum of minimal natural disease. In the cases described, the head injury in itself was insufficient to be a cause of death. Recognition of the role of the pharmacologic effect of cocaine and the lethal effects of its use in this setting is crucial.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1991

Cocaine in Decomposed Human Remains

Dion T. Manhoff; Ian C. Hood; Frank Caputo; Jeffrey Perry; Samuel Rosen; Haresh G. Mirchandani

From March 1988 through March 1990, at the Philadelphia Medical Examiners Office toxicology laboratory, samples from 77 decomposed human bodies were tested for the presence of cocaine, employing gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The material analyzed included decomposed soft tissue, bloody decomposition fluid, mummified tissue, maggots, and beetle feces. Twenty-two cases (28.6%) were positive for cocaine, many of these cases in states of advanced decomposition. These findings indicate the usefulness of testing decomposed tissue for cocaine in all cases where its presence is suspected. This is contrary to what might be expected, since cocaine is generally labile and rapidly broken down by both enzymatic and nonenzymatic mechanisms.


Survey of Ophthalmology | 1995

Ruptured vascular malformation masquerading as battered/shaken baby syndrome: A nearly tragic mistake

Jonathan D. Wirtschafter; David J. Weissgold; Donald L. Budenz; Ian C. Hood; Lucy B. Rorke

Battered/shaken baby syndrome is a clinical and pathologic diagnosis based on clinical examination, central nervous system dysfunction, and intracranial, optic nerve sheath, and retinal hemorrhages in infants under the age of three years. This report describes a case in which the battered/shaken baby syndrome was suspected because of an unusual parental reaction to an acute, mortal illness in their seven-week-old baby, as well as an acute intracranial hemorrhage coupled with the discovery of optic nerve sheath hemorrhages at necropsy. Thorough microscopic study, however, uncovered an unusual subarachnoid vascular malformation, the rupture of which led to the death of the infant. This case underscores the importance of complete postmortem examinations in cases of suspected child abuse, and teaches caution in jumping to hasty conclusions.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1990

Cocaine in Wayne County Medical Examiner's cases

Ian C. Hood; David Ryan; Joseph R. Monforte; James C. Valentour

We determined the incidence of detection of cocaine or its metabolites in Wayne County (Michigan) Medical Examiners cases from 1984 to 1987. Over this four-year period there was a significant (P less than 0.01) increase each year in evidence of recent cocaine use in this population, reaching 38.3% of all tested cases in 1987. Much of this increase was accounted for by homicide victims, especially those in their third or fourth decade of life, of whom 58.6 and 56.3%, respectively, tested positive in 1987. There was a large increase in recent cocaine use in teenage homicide victims in 1987, having previously changed little from 1984 to 1986. In victims of drug abuse, recent cocaine use also increased significantly (p less than 0.01) each year, reaching 47.6% in 1987, generally in combination with heroin. Although deaths attributed solely to cocaine were not as common, they also increased significantly each year from 4 in 1984 to 25 in 1987. Compared with the general population, those who use cocaine in Wayne County are more likely than those who do not to die prematurely, often as a result of violence.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2005

Lipoma of the tuber cinereum.

Albert Y. Chu; Lucy B. Rorke; Ian C. Hood

10-year-old boy was discovered hanging by a pair of pajama pants from the railing of an upper bunk bed. Resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful, and an autopsy was performed. Postmortem examination revealed a ligature furrow around the anterior and lateral aspects of the neck; examination of the brain revealed a 1.0-cm, well


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2015

Sudden Death by Occult Metastatic Carcinoma

Stephanie A. Dean; Benjamin Mathis; Leslie A. Litzky; Ian C. Hood

A 33‐year‐old female collapsed and died suddenly after presenting with acute dyspnea and increasing cough over the preceding several months. Autopsy revealed poorly differentiated linitis plastica adenocarcinoma of the stomach. Microscopic examination of the lungs showed features consistent with pulmonary tumor thrombotic microangiopathy (PTTM). PTTM is a well‐described complication in patients with adenocarcinoma. The typical presentation involves acute pulmonary hypertension, right‐sided heart failure, and sudden death, often before the adenocarcinoma is discovered. The pathophysiology of PTTM remains elusive; it has been suggested that carcinoma cells may produce substances that influence pulmonary vasculature. Our patient had classic clinical and histologic features of PTTM in addition to prominent extravascular compression by intralymphatic tumor cells. These features undoubtedly caused her precipitous decline and lethal pulmonary hypertension, induced by underlying adenocarcinoma. This case demonstrates that sudden death can occur from pulmonary hypertension induced by metastatic carcinoma with remarkably little prior symptomatology.


Academic forensic pathology | 2016

Fatal Catecholamine-Induced Cardiotoxicity Associated with Pheochromocytoma: Report of a Postpartum Case and Review of the Literature

Amber R. Wang; Stephanie A. Dean; Stefan K. Grebe; Ian C. Hood

Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas are catecholamine-secreting tumors characterized by excessive adrenergic stimulation. Common manifestations include hypertension, headache, sweating, and palpitations; however, rare life-threatening conditions have also been reported and include cardiovascular shock, myocardial infarction, arrhythmias, and cardiomyopathy. We report a case of a previously healthy 31-year-old postpartum female presenting with headache who died suddenly in an emergency room. Autopsy revealed a pheochromocytoma of the right adrenal with significantly elevated metanephrine concentrations and acute “myocarditis.” Sudden excessive catecholamine release can cause cardiovascular complications and be rapidly fatal without significant elevation of blood pressure. Awareness of this association by the medical examiner/coroner is vital in order to properly classify the death and apprise relatives of the potential utility of genetic screening.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 2006

Asphyxiation caused by giant fibrovascular polyp of the esophagus

Rachel L. Sargent; Ian C. Hood


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 1986

Immunohistochemical demonstration of homicidal insulin injection site

Ian C. Hood; Mirchandani H; Monforte J; Stacer W

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Lucy B. Rorke

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Albert Y. Chu

University of Pennsylvania

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Amber R. Wang

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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Donald L. Budenz

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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James C. Valentour

Case Western Reserve University

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Leslie A. Litzky

University of Pennsylvania

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