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Dive into the research topics where Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran is active.

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Featured researches published by Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2011

Blunt thoracic aortic injuries: an autopsy study.

Pedro G. Teixeira; Kenji Inaba; Galinos Barmparas; Chrysanthos Georgiou; Carla Toms; Thomas T. Noguchi; Christopher Rogers; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Demetrios Demetriades

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to identify the incidence and patterns of thoracic aortic injuries in a series of blunt traumatic deaths and describe their associated injuries. METHODS All autopsies performed by the Los Angeles County Department of Coroner for blunt traumatic deaths in 2005 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients who had a traumatic thoracic aortic (TTA) injury were compared with the victims who did not have this injury for differences in baseline characteristics and patterns of associated injuries. RESULTS During the study period, 304 (35%) of 881 fatal victims of blunt trauma received by the Los Angeles County Department of Coroner underwent a full autopsy and were included in the analysis. The patients were on average aged 43 years±21 years, 71% were men, and 39% had a positive blood alcohol screen. Motor vehicle collision was the most common mechanism of injury (50%), followed by pedestrian struck by auto (37%). A TTA injury was identified in 102 (34%) of the victims. The most common site of TTA injury was the isthmus and descending thoracic aorta, occurring in 67 fatalities (66% of the patients with TTA injuries). Patients with TTA injuries were significantly more likely to have other associated injuries: cardiac injury (44% vs. 25%, p=0.001), hemothorax (86% vs. 56%, p<0.001), rib fractures (86% vs. 72%, p=0.006), and intra-abdominal injury (74% vs. 49%, p<0.001) compared with patients without TTA injury. Patients with a TTA injury were significantly more likely to die at the scene (80% vs. 63%, p=0.002). CONCLUSION Thoracic aortic injuries occurred in fully one third of blunt traumatic fatalities, with the majority of deaths occurring at the scene. The risk for associated thoracic and intra-abdominal injuries is significantly increased in patients with thoracic aortic injuries.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1991

The Eyes of Child Abuse Victims: Autopsy Findings

Ralph S. Riffenburgh; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran

The authors studied 77 pairs of eyes removed from children who had died of suspected child abuse. Forty-seven of the cases had retinal hemorrhages. Those showing retinal hemorrhages were younger children and had fewer other stigmata of child abuse. Hemorrhages are more likely to occur in cases where the child was shaken or swung than in those with severe direct head trauma. The authors recommend that examination of the eyes be included in the autopsies of all small children who died without an obvious cause of death. Experience in both processing and reading of ocular material is necessary for reliable results.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2001

Child and Adolescent Suicide in a Large, Urban Area: Psychological, Demographic, and Situational Factors

Linda E. Weinberger; Shoba Sreenivasan; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Etan Markowitz

We examined all completed suicides by children and adolescents in Los Angeles County who died during 1996 and 1997. There were 46 subjects, aged 11 through 16. The majority of the decedents were males and over age 14. The predominant racial group was Hispanic. There was an almost even split between firearms and hanging as the means of death. Females had a statistically significantly higher rate of prior suicide attempts than males. Over one-third left a suicide note, almost one-half were noted to be depressed, and 22% tested positive for alcohol or illicit drugs. Less than one-quarter were in mental health treatment. Eighty-seven percent had difficulty transitioning to or during adolescence; e.g., problems at home, legal and school difficulties, and relationship losses. These findings are discussed in terms of Eriksonian developmental theory. We offer recommendations for intervention and prevention of suicide.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2008

Selecting forensic pathology as a career: a survey of the past with an eye on the future.

Randy Hanzlick; Joseph A. Prahlow; Scott Denton; Jeffrey M. Jentzen; Reade A. Quinton; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Suzanne Utley

Background: Each year there are about 30 to 40 physicians who train and become board-certified in the specialty area of forensic pathology, compared with hundreds or thousands in other disciplines. There are not enough board-certified forensic pathologists to cover national need. The National Association of Medical Examiners’ (NAME) Forensic Pathology Training Committee conducted a survey of its members to determine which factors influenced them to select forensic pathology as a career, and to offer suggestions about possible recruitment methods in the future. Methods: Two of the authors developed a 13-question survey form that included questions designed to determine the demographics of the responders, education level at which interest emerged, influential factors in the selection of forensic pathology, exposure to the subject matter of forensic pathology in medical school and residency, opinions about the best educational level for recruitment targeting, and faculty reactions to selection of forensic pathology as a career choice. Comments and suggestions were also solicited. The survey was sent by email to the 552 physician NAME members who have email addresses on file at the NAME Home Office. Results: One hundred sixty-one surveys were returned for a response rate of 29%. Most responders were full-time, board-certified forensic pathologists who had been practicing for an average of 18 years. The most influential factors in developing interest were exposure to forensic pathology in residency training and the influence of a professor or mentor. Medical school was the favored education level to target recruitment. Less than half had a forensic pathologist as an autopsy instructor in anatomic pathology residency. The number of responders who were encouraged by faculty to pursue forensic pathology was about the same as the number who were either discouraged or who perceived no particular positive or negative reinforcement. The typical scenario for forensic pathology exposure during anatomic pathology residency was a 4-week rotation at an off-site location from the medical school or hospital, with a mentor that had an adjunct, assistant, associate, or clinical faculty appointment. Conclusions: If the past predicts the future, it will be important to ensure that pathology residents have a planned and positive exposure to forensic pathology and that forensic pathologist mentors are available to training programs. There are a variety of other methods that might be used for recruitment which include more emphasis on medical students, a more academic approach, and affiliation, emphasizing the scientific nature of the work, integrating forensic pathology more into the ongoing medical school curriculum, improving the anatomic pathology residency autopsy experience, and avoiding possible turnoffs that can be caused by presentation of sensational or unpleasant cases that are not representative of routine daily work. Improved remuneration and building esteem by peers were also cited as critical factors, as was recruitment of more physicians into pathology in general. The Committee intends to develop a plan for recruitment and retention in the field of forensic pathology. Based on the survey data, this will require a conjoined effort with the American Association of Medical Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education, the Association of Pathology Chairman, and other entities to enable a planned and multifaceted approach to recruitment and retention in the field.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2013

Evolution of the psychological autopsy: fifty years of experience at the Los Angeles County Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner's Office.

Timothy Botello; Thomas T. Noguchi; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Linda E. Weinberger; Bruce H. Gross

The origin of the psychological autopsy was in the late 1950s and the result of a collaboration between the Los Angeles County Chief Medical Examiner‐Coroners Office and the Los Angeles Suicide Prevention Center. It was conceptualized as a thorough retrospective analysis of the decedents state of mind and intention at the time of death. It was used initially in “equivocal” deaths where the manner of death was possibly either suicide or accident. Later, it was used in cases where a party (primarily family members) protested the Medical Examiner‐Coroners suicide determination. Over the past 25 years, the University of Southern California Institute of Psychiatry, Law, and Behavioral Science has served as the psychiatric/psychological consultants to the Coroners Department. Research findings, the use of this approach in high‐profile cases, and the most recent manner in which the psychological autopsy is conducted are discussed.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2011

Familicide-Suicide: A Cluster of 3 Cases in Los Angeles County

Lisa Scheinin; Christopher Rogers; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran

Familicide and familicide-suicide have not been extensively documented or adequately defined in forensic and psychiatric literature. Such incidents occupy a distinct epidemiological niche and are often precipitated by financial stressors. We present a cluster of 3 such cases, all of which occurred within a 4-month period in Los Angeles County, Calif. The dynamics of these cases are evaluated relative to the literature.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2015

Testing for Infectious Diseases in Sudden Unexpected Infant Death: A Survey of Medical Examiner and Coroner Offices in the United States

Erin G. Brooks; James R. Gill; Robert Buchsbaum; Suzanne Utley; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Diane C. Peterson

OBJECTIVES To determine interoffice variability in routinely performed sudden unexpected infant death (SUID) postmortem studies for infection and to assess availability and perceived utility of various tests of infectious diseases. STUDY DESIGN Online surveys were sent to all 154 offices of US medical examiners and coroners serving populations >300,000 people. Surveys included a set of potential laboratory tests for infectious disease. Respondents were asked to select which tests were available in their offices, and which tests were performed routinely in SUIDs vs which tests should be performed routinely. RESULTS Of the 45 complete responses, 4.4% did not routinely perform histology, 8.9% did not routinely perform viral studies (ie, culture or molecular diagnostics), 22.2% did not routinely perform blood cultures, 26.7% did not routinely perform lung bacterial cultures, and 44.4% did not routinely perform cerebrospinal fluid cultures. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that there is considerable interoffice variability with testing for infectious diseases in SUIDs. This appeared to be largely the result of a perceived lack of testing utility rather than a lack of test availability. Evidence-based practice guidelines regarding the interpretation of microbial testing results, as well as common testing protocols/algorithms, may lead to more accurate and standardized data, thus improving SUID investigation and surveillance.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2009

Subaortic Pseudoaneurysm of the Left Ventricle Complicating Staphyloccal Endocarditis

Pauline Saint-Martin; Christopher Rogers; Eugene Carpenter; Michael C. Fishbein; Stanley Lau; Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran

Abstract:  Subaortic pseudoaneurysms are rare but can be a cause of sudden death in young individuals. This case report involves a 20‐year‐old Vietnamese male who died suddenly from rupture of a subaortic pseudoaneurysm with resultant hemopericardium with tamponade. He had a history of bicuspid aortic valve with recent but healed Staphylococcal endocarditis. A review of the literature reveals few similar cases and enlightens the association between aortic bicuspid valve, endocarditis, and subvalvular aortic aneurysm. The pathogenesis as well as recent studies that identified aneurysm predisposing genes in patients with bicuspid aortic valve will be discussed.


Human Pathology | 1989

Acute and chronic pericholangiolitis in association with multifocal hepatic lymphangiomatosis

Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran; Russell P. Sherwin

Multifocal, lymphangiomatous lesions were found in the right lobe of the liver of a 9-year-old girl who died seven days after head trauma. We believe the lesions represent a cystic and pseudoneoplastic dilatation of liver lymphatics secondary to a posttraumatic complication, acute and chronic inflammation primarily of small bile ducts, and canaliculi (pericholangiolitis). The findings provide new evidence that inflammation and fluid overload, in the absence of a congenital malformation, are cardinal factors in the pathogenesis of some forms of lymphangiomatosis.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 1987

Fatal disopyramide intoxication from suicidal/accidental overdose

Lakshmanan Sathyavagiswaran

Disopyramide is an oral antiarrhythmic drug which reduces conduction velocity, prolongs duration of action potential and the effective refractory period, and exerts vagolytic properties. The drug is usually well absorbed orally. The principal use of the drug is to suppress ventricular extrasystoles with usual oral dosage of 100 to 200 mg every 6 h, until blood levels of 2 to 4 micrograms/mL are attained. The use of the drug for suicide is uncommon as it is a prescription drug. Two cases of fatal disopyramide intoxication seen at the Los Angeles County Medical Examiners Office will be discussed followed by a review of the literature of fatal suicidal disopyramide overdose. Case 1 was a 31-year-old male pharmacist with known history of depression and no history of heart disease. His decomposed remains were found with a suicide note and with several disopyramide tablets. At autopsy the blood level for disopyramide was 146 micrograms/mL. Case 2 is a 40-year-old male with history of alcoholism and prior suicidal attempts who regularly took disopyramide to control ventricular arrhythmias. He apparently ingested 36 100-mg tablets of disopyramide before his final collapse. At autopsy his blood level of disopyramide was 63 micrograms/mL.

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Christopher Rogers

University of Southern California

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Thomas T. Noguchi

University of Southern California

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Carla Toms

University of Southern California

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Demetrios Demetriades

University of Southern California

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Kenji Inaba

University of Southern California

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Chrysanthos Georgiou

University of Southern California

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Galinos Barmparas

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Linda E. Weinberger

University of Southern California

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Pedro G. Teixeira

University of Texas at Austin

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Suzanne Utley

Georgia Bureau of Investigation

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