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Featured researches published by Marc Bollmann.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2014

Postmortem Imaging of sudden cardiac death

Katarzyna Michaud; Silke Grabherr; Christian Jackowski; Marc Bollmann; Franceso Doenz; Patrice Mangin

Postmortem imaging is increasingly used in forensic practice in cases of natural deaths related to cardiovascular diseases, which represent the most common causes of death in developed countries. While radiological examination is generally considered to be a good complement for conventional autopsy, it was thought to have limited application in cardiovascular pathology. At present, multidetector computed tomography (MDCT), CT angiography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are used in postmortem radiological investigation of cardiovascular pathologies. This review presents the actual state of postmortem imaging for cardiovascular pathologies in cases of sudden cardiac death (SCD), taking into consideration both the advantages and limitations. The radiological evaluation of ischemic heart disease (IHD), the most frequent cause of SCD in the general population of industrialized countries, includes the examination of the coronary arteries and myocardium. Postmortem CT angiography (PMCTA) is very useful for the detection of stenoses and occlusions of coronary arteries but less so for the identification of ischemic myocardium. MRI is the method of choice for the radiological investigation of the myocardium in clinical practice, but its accessibility and application are still limited in postmortem practice. There are very few reports implicating postmortem radiology in the investigation of other causes of SCD, such as cardiomyopathies, coronary artery abnormalities, and valvular pathologies. Cardiomyopathies representing the most frequent cause of SCD in young athletes cannot be diagnosed by echocardiography, the most widely available technique in clinical practice for the functional evaluation of the heart and the detection of cardiomyopathies. PMCTA and MRI have the potential to detect advanced stages of diseases when morphological substrate is present, but these methods have yet to be sufficiently validated for postmortem cases. Genetically determined channelopathies cannot be detected radiologically. This review underlines the need to establish the role of postmortem radiology in the diagnosis of SCD.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2009

Involvement of Amphetamines in Sudden and Unexpected Death

Jennifer L. Pilgrim; Dimitri Gerostamoulos; Olaf H. Drummer; Marc Bollmann

Abstract:  In the present study, the effects of amphetamine‐class drugs were examined in cases reported to the Victorian coroner from 2001 to 2005 to determine if death can occur from the use of amphetamine‐class drugs alone. A total of 169 cases were reviewed where a forensic autopsy detected amphetamine(s) in the blood. Pathology, toxicology, and police reports were analyzed in all cases to ascertain the involvement of amphetamine‐class drugs in these deaths. In Victoria, methamphetamine (MA) is the principal abused amphetamine‐class followed by methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). There were six cases in which a cerebral hemorrhage caused death and three cases in which serotonin syndrome was established as being caused by the interaction of MDMA and moclobemide. There were 19 cases in which long‐term use of amphetamines was associated with heart disease. There were three cases where amphetamine‐class drugs alone were regarded as the cause of death, of which two cases exhibited high levels of MDMA and lesser amounts of MA and/or amphetamine. There were no cases in which significant natural disease was absent and death was regarded as caused by the use of MA. There was no correlation between blood concentration of drug and outcome.


Forensic Science International | 2011

Death caused by cardioinhibitory reflex cardiac arrest—A systematic review of cases

Bettina Schrag; Paul Vaucher; Marc Bollmann; Patrice Mangin

Forensic pathologists often refer to the cardioinhibitory reflex cardiac arrest (CiRCA) following short neck trauma as a mechanism of death. We sought via a systematic review of the literature to identify circumstances under which carotid bifurcation stimulation could lead to death. Two independent reviewers selected case studies or reports from Medline, ISI Web of Knowledge, and Embase. Circumstances and contributory factors were extracted for each case. From the available data, authors independently assessed whether CiRCA was highly probable (no alternative explanation possible), probable (alternative explanation possible), or unlikely (alternative explanation highly probable). A narrative approach was used to define circumstances in which CiRCA remained possible. From the 48 published cases evoking CiRCA as a possible cause of death between 1881 and 2009, 28 were most likely to result of other mechanism of death (i.e., cerebral hypoxia due to carotid compression, mechanical asphyxia, myocardial infarction). CiRCA remained possible for 20 cases (including five based on anecdotal evidence only) with only one case with no alternative explanation other than CiRCA. Our findings support the presumption that reflex cardiac arrhythmia due to carotid bifurcation stimulation cannot provoke death alone. Actual state of knowledge suggests CiRCA might be contributory to death in the presence of drug abuse and/or cardiac pathology, often associated with physical and/or mental excitation.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2008

Evaluation of postmortem measurement of NT-proBNP as a marker for cardiac function

Katarzyna Michaud; Marc Augsburger; Nicolas Donzé; Sara Sabatasso; Mohamed Faouzi; Marc Bollmann; Patrice Mangin

Clinical biomarkers of cardiac function could also be monitored postmortem. Among the natriuretic peptides, the aminoterminal portion of pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) appears to be a more reliable postmortem tool than the BNP, owing to its longer half-life and greater stability. In living persons, NT-proBNP is considered to be a marker of heart failure, and its level rises after cardiac ischemia. The goal of this study was first to evaluate the postmortem stability of NT-proBNP, then to measure the NT-proBNP levels in postmortem cases of heart failure related to coronary ischemia. The goal of this study was also to evaluate the correlations between different specimens collected at autopsy (e.g. blood, serum, vitreous humor and pericardial fluid). The study included 96 cases, which were classified into 4 groups according to the autopsy and histological findings. The NT-proBNP levels were significantly higher in individuals who had suffered from chronic cardiac ischemia, with or without acute coronary events, than in either control cases or those who had suffered from acute thromboembolism or acute rupture of a plaque without chronic cardiac ischemia. The highest levels were registered in individuals who had suffered from acute coronary thromboembolism in association with chronic coronary ischemia. Good correlations in the NT-proBNP levels for the different specimens were observed between samples of femoral blood, serum, and pericardial fluid. Our data indicated that postmortem measurements of NT-proBNP are reliable and compatible with clinical findings.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2017

Imaging mass spectrometry of elements in forensic cases by LA-ICP-MS

Estelle Lauer; Max Villa; Morgane Jotterand; Raquel Vilarino; Marc Bollmann; Katarzyna Michaud; Silke Grabherr; Marc Augsburger; Aurélien Thomas

Laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) was performed to map elements in thin formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections of two forensic cases with firearm and electrocution injuries, respectively. In both cases, histological examination of the wounded tissue regions revealed the presence of exogenous aggregates that may be interpreted as metallic depositions. The use of imaging LA-ICP-MS allowed us to unambiguously determine the elemental composition of the observed aggregates assisting the pathologist in case assessments. To the best of our knowledge, we demonstrate for the first time the use of imaging LA-ICP-MS as a complementary tool for forensic pathologists and toxicologists in order to map the presence of metals and other elements in thin tissue sections of post-mortem cases.


Forensic Science International | 2008

Comment on “A microbiological test for the diagnosis of death by drowning” by A. Lucci and A. Cirnelli

Marc Bollmann; Noel Woodford

A. Lucci and A. Cirnelli have presented very interesting and indeed promising microbiological results in drowning victims. They were able to demonstrate almost invariably positive blood cultures for faecal coliforms and faecal streptococci in drowning victims whereas in a control group of people dying from other causes the cultures were negative for these species in the early postmortem period. Even though these results are spectacular, in our opinion only the inclusion of a control group of bodies having undergone postmortem immersion would allow the proposed conclusions to be reached with any degree of certainty. By comparing drowning victims with a control group composed of subjects who died from causes unrelated to immersion, there is no proof that postmortem immersion of a body would not produce the same positive culture results by means including passive diffusion and/or contamination. Based on this study design and positive culture results for the above species, one


Forensic Science International | 2006

Swiss DVI at the tsunami disaster: Expect the unexpected

M. Perrier; Marc Bollmann; A. Girod; Patrice Mangin


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2012

Death caused by cardioinhibitory reflex: what experts believe.

Bettina Schrag; Patrice Mangin; Paul Vaucher; Marc Bollmann


Annales De Toxicologie Analytique | 2008

Consommation de cannabis: quels sont les risques ?

Christian Giroud; Marc Bollmann; Aurélien Thomas; Patrice Mangin; Bernard Favrat


Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine | 2007

Interpretation of lesions of the cardiac conduction system in cocaine-related fatalities

Katarzyna Michaud; Marc Augsburger; Frank Sporkert; Marc Bollmann; Thomas Krompecher; Patrice Mangin

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Franceso Doenz

University Hospital of Lausanne

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M. Perrier

University of Lausanne

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