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Featured researches published by Jehuda Hiss.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2008

Cardiac perforation by a pectus bar after surgical correction of pectus excavatum: case report and review of the literature

Hadas Gips; Konstantin Zaitsev; Jehuda Hiss

Pectus excavatum (PE) is a congenital sternal depression. The two most popular methods of correction are the highly modified Ravitch repair (HMRR) and the Nuss procedure. Presented here is a case of PE surgical correction in a 17.5-year-old male, beginning with the Nuss technique and converting to the HMRR during surgery, due to unsatisfying results. The procedure inadvertently culminated in perforation of the heart and lungs by the inserted pectus bar, with aggravation of the damage by resuscitation efforts. This article analyzes the chain of events leading to the patient’s death and reviews the literature on the subject.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1996

Beaten to death : why do they die ?

Jehuda Hiss; Tzipi Kahana; Chen Kugel

The remains of 53 men that had been beaten to death were examined. Six (11.3%) died of either blood aspiration or intracranial hemorrhage; 15 of the cases (28.3%) succumbed to hypovolemic shock, and 32 of the cases (60.4%) died of fat embolism syndrome (FES). Fractures of long bones were found only in four victims. Fatal FES produced by the mechanical disintegration of adipose tissue that migrates into the bloodstream seems to be a common phenomenon in the fatalities examined in this study. No correlation, however, was found between the presence of long bone fractures and the severity of FES, and no bone marrow emboli were detected on histologic examination of target organs. Scattered subcutaneous hematomata were present in all of the victims, although the volume of extravasated blood could not be calculated from the total surface area of the bruises. Contusions limited to the limbs have the potential of masking fatal volumes of extravasated blood that suffuse the musculature mass. Hypovolemic and neurogenic shock, as well as systemic effects of crush injury, should be considered contributing factors to death from FES. These findings contradict the previously published postulate that victims of blunt force trauma succumb primarily to massive hemorrhages.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 1996

THE ABBREVIATED INJURY SCALE : A VALUABLE TOOL FOR FORENSIC DOCUMENTATION OF TRAUMA

Zvulun Friedman; Chen Kugel; Jehuda Hiss; Baruch Marganit; Stein M; Shmuel C. Shapira

Anatomic trauma scoring systems are fundamental to trauma research. The Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) and its derivative, the Injury Severity Score (ISS), are the most frequently used scales. We assessed the applicability of the AIS and the ISS systems for postmortem forensic documentation of trauma. In a prospective study, all trauma autopsies performed between January 1 and June 30, 1993, were coded according to the AIS and ISS method. All cases were reviewed by a consultant in forensic medicine and a traumatologist. Cases were grouped in three categories according to ISS values: 0-14, 16-66, and 75. These categories represent minor, major, and incompatible-with-life injuries, respectively. All autopsy findings in which ISS was < or = 14 were peer-reviewed to establish mechanism and cause of death. In the 6-month period, 279 trauma-related autopsies were studied. Age at death averaged 37.1 +/- 18.7 (mean +/- SD). Eighty-six percent of the victims were male. Penetrating trauma was the mechanism of injury in 67%. ISS was 0-14 in 19 cases, 16-66 in 150 cases, and 75 in 110 cases. In conclusion, AIS and ISS scoring systems are applicable to trauma forensic documentation. Using these methods for coding postmortem findings may help in establishing a database for trauma research, and this information could constitute a major part of continuous quality improvement of trauma management. Low ISS values may serve as a warning, sometimes indicating preventable death.


Medicine Science and The Law | 1997

Rubber and Plastic Ammunition Lethal Injuries: The Israeli Experience

Jehuda Hiss; Fredric N Hellman; Tzipi Kahana

Rubber and plastic ammunition was used by the Israeli Defence Forces between the years 1987 and 1993 (Intifada) almost exclusively as a deterrent to aggression by the Palestinian civilian population in the occupied territories of Gaza, Judea and Samaria. While designed to avoid the serious wounds and deaths caused by the use of conventional military ammunition, the firing of rubber and plastic bullets has resulted in extensive injuries and more than 20 deaths. The data from the autopsies of 17 of these victims, mostly teenagers, were analysed. Ten of the victims died from injuries inflicted by Improved Rubber Bullets, while the other seven succumbed to injuries caused by Plastic Bullets. In most instances, the cause of death was related to injuries to the brain. Ballistic features of non-conventional bullets are discussed, and suggestions to curtail the serious injuries and fatalities arising from their use are given, with emphasis on firing from a safe range. British and South African experience with this type of ammunition is compared with our observations.


Laryngoscope | 1991

Basement‐membrane thickening of the vocal cords in sudden infant death syndrome

Anat Shatz; Jehuda Hiss; Baruch Arensburg

Sudden infant death syndrome remains the leading cause of death in infants between the ages of 1 month and 1 year. Diagnosis at autopsy is usually reached by process of elimination, as no obvious cause of death is recognized. The larynges of 23 sudden infant death syndrome victims, as well as 6 infants and 3 fetuses who died of other known causes, were examined in this study. While thickening of the basement membrane of the vocal cords was apparent in all sudden infant death syndrome victims, no such finding was present in the larynges of infants and fetuses dying of other causes. Thus, it is suggested that basement‐membrane thickening may serve as a diagnostic tool for identification of sudden infant death syndrome at autopsy.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2002

Personal identification based on radiographic vertebral features.

Kahana T; Goldin L; Jehuda Hiss

Personal identification of human remains constitutes about 10% of the normal caseload of any forensic medicine practice. Identification can be achieved by a variety of methods, one of which is the comparison of antemortem and postmortem radiographs. There are numerous accounts of cranial and dental radiographic features useful for identification, whereas the availability of postcranial radiographs and especially plates that depict the vertebral column is less widespread among the forensic community. The authors here review the various vertebral features instrumental in positive identification that can be identified on radiographs of the spine.


Medicine Science and The Law | 1997

Myocarditis misdiagnosed as sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).

Anat Shatz; Jehuda Hiss; Baruch Arensburg

In a retrospective study spanning five years, the histologic sections of 35 autopsies of infants diagnosed as SIDS victims were reviewed. Based on a recently reported study in which findings on marked basement membrane thickening (BMT) in the true vocal cords was suggested as a pathognomonic marker of SIDS, we expected to find BMT in all these cases. However, in seven of the reviewed autopsies (20%) no BMT was detected. Examination of new histologic sections of all the victims revealed myocarditis in these seven cases. In a control group (n=18) of children with known cause of death, neither BMT nor myocarditis were found. The incidence of myocardial diseases in infants and young adults (20% and 22% respectively) reported in the literature indicates that myocarditis is not a rare cause of sudden death in infants. Therefore, in SIDS-suspected cases a meticulous post-mortem microscopic examination of the heart should be carried out, especially whenever BMT of the vocal cords is absent.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1997

Suicidal terrorist bombings in Israel--identification of human remains

Tzipi Kahana; Maya Freund; Jehuda Hiss

Positive identification of human remains is one of the most important tasks in mass disaster investigations. Religious and jurisdictional demands in Israel, require the identification process to be completed in the shortest possible time. In the 18 suicidal terrorist bombings that took place in Israel between the years 1993-1996, 127 victims and 19 perpetrators were killed, and their severely fragmented bodies were identified within 24 h. The efficient completion of the identification endeavor was enabled by the implementation of a variety of techniques and the close collaboration in the investigation between the different emergency and forensic agencies. This paper presents the mass disaster identification policy and techniques currently used in Israel. The importance of an interdisciplinary approach for the identification of extremely fragmented human remains from mass disasters and the creation of a central data bank of fingerprints and genetic markers is emphasized.


Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine | 2003

Self inflicted gunshot wound caused by a home-made gun – medico-legal and ballistic examination

Jehuda Hiss; E. Shoshani; K. Zaitsew; P. Giverts; Tzipi Kahana

The reconstruction of the mechanism of a fatal gunshot wound inflicted with a zip gun is presented. The joint investigation of medico-legal team and firearms experts teams resulted in an explanation of the unusual distribution of gunpowder encountered around the entry wound. Although the use of crude home-made weapons associated with various criminal activities and suicide is widespread, the forensic literature on this subject is sparse especially concerning tests conducted on the weapon.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1994

Positive Identification by Means of Trabecular Bone Pattern Comparison

Tzipi Kahana; Jehuda Hiss

Positive identification of human remains is often achieved by comparing antemortem and postmortem radiographs. Usually, radiographs contain a number of markers that can serve as reference for comparison, one of these markers is the trabecular bone pattern depicted in the roentgenograms. In the present case, densitometric analysis of the trabecular bone pattern was used as the sole means of identification. Later on, two other methods confirmed the original positive identification.

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S. Kay

Tel Aviv University

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