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Dive into the research topics where John R. Fernandes is active.

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Featured researches published by John R. Fernandes.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2005

Suicide in Children and Adolescents: A 10-Year Retrospective Review

Danielle Shaw; John R. Fernandes; Chitra Rao

Suicide is second only to accidents as the most common cause of death for children and adolescents age 10 to 19 in Canada. All of the pediatric cases that were referred to the Hamilton Regional Forensic Pathology Unit from 1993 to 2002 were reviewed. For the purpose of this study, pediatric deaths were defined as deaths in the age group of 1 day up to and including 19 years of age. Specific criteria for suicide were applied to each case, independent of the manner of death issued by the coroner. The criteria were 3-fold. First, homicide had to be ruled out by the police investigation and autopsy findings. Second, the method had to be consistent with self-infliction. Finally, there had to be some evidence of suicidal intent. Questionable cases were discussed among the authors, and if reasonable intent could not be established, then the case was excluded. The autopsy and police reports were examined in detail regarding age, sex, location and method of suicide, presence of suicide notes, and any contributing psychologic factors or stressors. Of the 501 pediatric autopsies performed during the 10-year period, 31 (6%) met the criteria of suicide. The majority of cases (87%) were in older adolescents (age 15 to 19), and the male to female ratio was 2.4:1. Psychologic factors were identified in some of the cases, including depressed mood (77%), suicidal ideation (45%), previous suicide attempts (23%), and drug or alcohol problems (19%). Most of the suicides (61%) occurred in the victims home, and 12 (39%) cases left a suicide note. In 9 cases (29%), alcohol or street drugs were detected postmortem, though in 8 cases toxicology was not performed. Hanging (48%) was the most common method of suicide, followed by firearms (13%), poisoning (10%), drowning (10%), and blunt force vehicular trauma (10%). Almost 60% of the male suicides were by hanging. No specific trend was identified in the 9 female suicides. These results were compared with similar studies within Canada and other countries. Overall, the method of suicide is dictated by what is convenient and readily available, though the acceptance of various suicide methods can change over time. Suicide prevention efforts should be tailored to address local trends.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1988

Bowel obstruction in patients with ovarian cancer: A search for prognostic factors☆

John R. Fernandes; Robert Seymour; Samy Suissa

Patients with concomitant ovarian cancer and bowel obstruction were studied in an effort to find objective prognostic factors predictive of patient outcome. A total of 62 patients were followed from 31 to 354 weeks, and a total of 20 variables were considered in the analyses. At the end of the study 49 patients were dead of their disease, and 13 were alive (six disease free and seven with persistent disease). Survival probabilities of the sample were 79% at 6 weeks, 48% at 20 weeks, and 24% at 104 weeks. Univariate analyses revealed no significant difference in the survival times of medically versus surgically treated patients; age greater than 60 years at diagnosis of cancer, presence of ascites, low serum albumin levels, elevated blood urea nitrogen levels, elevated alkaline phosphatase levels, lack of previous radiotherapy (p less than 0.002 for all), advanced tumor stage, normal/ileus x-ray results, and a short diagnosis to obstruction interval (p less than 0.04 for all) resulted in lower survival probabilities.


Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine | 2009

Fatal traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage due to assault-related tear of the basilar artery

Emily R. Filter; John R. Fernandes

Traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage after blunt head injury or neck trauma most often occurs due to intracranial or extracranial vertebral artery rupture. A literature review confirms that subarachnoid hemorrhage related to basilar artery disruption is a rare event. Strong associations have been made between basal subarachnoid hemorrhage and relatively minor blunt force injuries to the face, head, or neck. Moreover, the degree of hemorrhage may appear striking and disproportionate to the external and internal evidence of injury. We present a case of an assault-related basilar artery tear causing fatal subarachnoid hemorrhage, despite minimal external injury. This report provides an overview of potential mechanisms accounting for vertebrobasilar system rupture, with application to our case.


Cardiovascular Pathology | 2015

Sudden cardiac death due to coronary artery dissection as a complication of cardiac sarcoidosis

Savas Kanaroglou; Vidhya Nair; John R. Fernandes

Spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) is a rare cause of acute coronary syndrome (ACS), cardiac tamponade and sudden cardiac death that typically affects young women in the postpartum period. Rarely, it can be caused by systemic inflammatory conditions such as sarcoidosis. Sarcoidosis is an inflammatory disease most often affecting the lung and lymph nodes that can sometimes affect the heart. The authors report a case of sudden cardiac death caused by SCAD in the context of undiagnosed and subclinical cardiac sarcoidosis. The decedent was a 47-year-old male with a relatively innocuous past medical history. He was found dead in bed. At autopsy, there was a lethal hemopericardium resulting in cardiac tamponade. Gross examination of the heart revealed dissection of the posterior descending coronary branch of the right coronary artery. Histologically, the coronary artery showed acute and organizing dissection with evidence of vasculitis. A chronic inflammatory infiltrate consisting of lymphocytes, histiocytes, eosinophils and giant cells was seen. Sections of the myocardium showed myocarditis with a nonnecrotizing granuloma. The death was attributed to cardiac tamponade secondary to SCAD in the context of systemic sarcoidosis. The presented case demonstrates two concurrent rare pathologies and highlights the importance of considering SCAD in cases of sudden cardiac death at autopsy.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2007

Fatal intoxication with a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, lorazepam, and codeine

Emily R. Filter; Laura Gorczynski; John R. Fernandes

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors were introduced in 1987 as an alternative treatment option for patients with depression or certain anxiety disorders. Unfortunately, this greater use has prompted a corresponding increase in reports of more severe side effects and fatalities, with a majority of fatalities occurring due to coingestion of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors with other substances or serotonergic drugs. We report a case which exemplifies one such fatality related to sertraline, lorazepam, and codeine coingestion. A brief discussion of the presumed mechanism by which death occurred will be offered.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2008

Motor vehicle collisions and their demographics: a 5-year retrospective study of the Hamilton-Wentworth Niagara region

Carolyne E. Lemieux; John R. Fernandes; Chalapati Rao

Abstract:u2002 This retrospective study examined population demographics associated with motor vehicle collision (MVC) fatalities over a 5‐year period in the Hamilton‐Wentworth Niagara region. Variables were drawn from the five factors proposed by Fierro ( 1 ) for investigating deaths caused by transportation: human, chemical, environmental, vehicular, and highway. Factors analyzed included age, gender, position to the vehicle, site(s) of injury, toxicology, environmental contributors, and vehicular findings. From 1999 to 2004, there were 321 MVC fatalities that primarily involved males 20 to 29u2003years of age and commonly drivers or pedestrians. Cars and trucks were the most frequent vehicles. Fatalities occurred most often on local and regional roads on Fridays and Sundays between 6 pm and 6 am. Mechanical failure and weather conditions were not significant contributors. Toxicological analyses (275/321) were performed on the majority of the study population. Ethanol was present in isolation and with other substances, especially cannabis, mostly in male drivers 20–59u2003years of age.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2007

Suicide by explosion of natural gas: case report and review of literature.

Dina El Demellawy; John R. Fernandes

Natural gas (NG) is used as a home energy supply and, with or without ignition, is rarely misused to result in death. The authors report an unusual suicidal explosive death induced by NG. A huge explosion with resultant fire had blown out a bungalow, with destructive damage predominantly above the ground, resulting in only 1 exterior wall and the foundation still in place. The victim was transferred to the hospital, and on the way, he admitted to undoing the natural gas fitting and to igniting the source. He survived for a short interval of time in the hospital before all resuscitative efforts failed. During autopsy, a special attention was paid to victims identification and search for other injuries, not related to the explosion, so as to exclude or document homicidal injuries disguised by the subsequent explosion. The forensic pathologist should be aware of the different kinds of inflammable substances and integrate the findings with the scene information and the impression of the investigators at the scene.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2017

Benford's Law for Quality Assurance of Manner of Death Counts in Small and Large Databases

Jeremy Daniels; Samantha-Jo Caetano; Dirk Huyer; Andrew Stephen; John R. Fernandes; Alice Lytwyn; Fred M. Hoppe

To assess if Benfords law, a mathematical law used for quality assurance in accounting, can be applied as a quality assurance measure for the manner of death determination. We examined a regional forensic pathology services monthly manner of death counts (N = 2352) from 2011 to 2013, and provincial monthly and weekly death counts from 2009 to 2013 (N = 81,831). We tested whether each datasets leading digit followed Benfords law via the chi‐square test. For each database, we assessed whether number 1 was the most common leading digit. The manner of death counts first digit followed Benfords law in all the three datasets. Two of the three datasets had 1 as the most frequent leading digit. The manner of death data in this study showed qualities consistent with Benfords law. The law has potential as a quality assurance metric in the manner of death determination for both small and large databases.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2017

Association of Waist-Hip Ratio to Sudden Cardiac Death and Severe Coronary Atherosclerosis in Medicolegal Autopsies

Linda Kocovski; Joshua Dogyeong Lee; Sameer Parpia; John R. Fernandes; Vidhya Nair

Abstract Various modifiable and nonmodifiable risk factors, such as abdominal obesity, are known to affect the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and subsequent sudden cardiac death (SCD). The waist-hip ratio is a surrogate marker of visceral obesity that has been shown in various studies to be a better predictor of cardiovascular risk than the body mass index (BMI), a measurement of generalized obesity. Waist-hip ratio was measured prospectively on medicolegal autopsies performed for 1 year, in addition to standard measurements of BMI and heart weight, and histologic determination of severe coronary atherosclerosis (SCA, coronary artery diameter stenosis >75%). Logistic modeling was performed to determine any association between WHR, BMI, cardiovascular disease risk factors, heart weight, and SCD or SCA. Waist-hip ratio was not shown to be statistically significantly associated with either SCD (P = 0.68) or SCA (P = 0.14). Body mass index was shown to be significantly associated with SCA (P < 0.001), and heart weight was shown to be significantly associated with both SCD and SCA (P < 0.001, both). Waist-hip ratio, as a surrogate marker of central obesity and increased risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, is shown not to be statistically significantly associated with either SCD or SCA in postmortem cases.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 1988

Bowel obstruction in patients with ovarian cancer: A search for prognostic factors

John R. Fernandes; Robert Seymour; Samy Suissa

means of both DNA flow cytometry and morphometry a clear distinction was found between a favorable group of 15 patients, with a median survival of more than 60 months, and the remaining patients, of whom the majority died during the same follow-up period. The levels of significance for DNA flow cytometry (P = 0.0002) and morphometry (P = 0.0001) with respect to survival of the favorable and unfavorable groups of patients were higher than for histological grading (P = 0.02). In a multivariate analysis it was demonstrated that morphometry proved to be the factor of most relevance for survival, although the effect of DNA flow cytometry was almost as good. Data such as presence of ascites, the size of the residual tumor mass, choice of chemotherapy. FIGG stage, and histological grade were not of additional prognostic relevance in this analysis. It is concluded that both morphometry and DNA flow cytometry are a step forward in identifying favorable and unfavorable groups of patients with advanced ovarian cancer. For the daily practice of management of ovarian cancer patients, morphometry may be an attractive support of visual grading.

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Emily R. Filter

Hamilton General Hospital

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Bernard Pawlowicz

McMaster University Medical Centre

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Chitra Rao

Hamilton Health Sciences

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