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Dive into the research topics where Valter Stemberga is active.

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Featured researches published by Valter Stemberga.


American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology | 2010

Suicidal drowning in Southwestern Croatia: a 25-year review.

Valter Stemberga; Marina Bralic; Miran Čoklo; Drazen Cuculic; Alan Bosnar

We designed a retrospective study to analyze suicidal drowning deaths occurring between 1981 and 2005. During the study period there were 134 cases of suicidal drowning accounting 10% of all suicides, and 31% of all drowning deaths. Of the 134 drowning suicides, 76 (57%) incidents occurred in the sea, 46 (34%) in water wells, 8 (6%) in rivers, and 4 (3%) in bathtubs. During the study period, cases of suicidal drowning were not identified in males and females under the age of 20. In females aged 65 years and older, drowning represents the most common type of suicide. Commonly, the victims were sober at the time of the incident. Cases of suicidal drowning committed in water wells are unexpectedly high, considering abundance of salt water.


Medical Hypotheses | 2009

Immunohistochemical surfactant protein-A expression: Fatal drowning vs. postmortem immersion

Valter Stemberga; Sanja Štifter; Dražen Cuculić; Miran Čoklo; Alan Bosnar

The postmortem diagnosis of drowning continues to be one of the most difficult in forensic pathology because of unspecific autopsy findings. It must be always remembered that disposal of a victim body in water is not unknown in homicide. The most important physiological consequence in fatal drowning is hypoxemia. The air-liquid interface of alveoli and distal airways of the mature lung are lined with a thin layer of lung surfactant, composed of phospholipids, proteins and neutral lipids. Surfactant components are synthesized and/or incorporated into lung surfactant in alveolar type II cells, and secreted to form an airspace lining film. The composition and function of lung surfactant is disturbed in cases od acute lung injury (ALI) including drowning. Surfactant protein-A (SP-A) is the most abundant surfactant protein. Surfactant protein-A (SP-A) is secreted by type II alveolar cells and cells. Its immunohistochemical distribution is observed in two different pathways: a linear membranous staining and a granular intra-alveolar staining. We hypothesize the significance of immunohistochemical detection of SP-A and its help in determination of the time of death, and possibly distinguishing of death by immersion vs. postmortem immersion using the morphological analysis applied on SP-A immunohistochemical stained lung tissue samples. We also argue in favor of routine use of SP-A staining in selected forensic cases where pathogenesis includes mechanical asphyxia and lung pathology. Although some studies reached conclusions to define the mechanisms involved in pathogenesis of mechanical asphyxia and aspiration necessity of additional studies arose. The mechanism of the production of massive aggregates remains to be determined. In the mean time the detection of SP-A (immunohistochemical) as well as biochemical is potentially useful tool in the forensic practice with possible application in daily practice.


Journal of Travel Medicine | 2013

Dive‐Related Fatalities Among Tourist and Local Divers in the Northern Croatian Littoral (1980–2010)

Valter Stemberga; Veronika Rasic; Josip Azman; Ivan Sosa; Miran Čoklo; Ivone Uhac; Alan Bosnar

BACKGROUND The aim of the study was to retrospectively analyze diving fatalities occurring in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County (northern Croatian littoral), Croatia between 1980 and 2010 in order to identify differences between fatally injured tourist and resident divers, as well as temporal changes in the frequency of diver deaths. METHODS Medico-legal and police reports of 47 consecutive fatal diving cases were reviewed to determine the frequency of death among divers in relation to year and month of death, age, sex, nationality, organization of diving, diving type, and health condition. RESULTS The majority of victims were foreign citizens (59.6%) most of whom fell victim to scuba diving (70.4%). It was found that 79% of resident divers succumbed during free-diving. The number of diving fatalities increased significantly in the last three decades, especially among free-divers. Of the victims, 93% were males, usually belonging to younger age groups with tourist divers being significantly older than local divers. And 31.9% of divers, mostly tourists, showed signs of acute, chronic, or congenital pathological conditions. CONCLUSION Fatally injured foreign divers differ from resident diver fatalities in diving method and age. Tourists are the group most at risk while scuba diving according to the Croatian sample. Occupational scuba divers and free-divers are the group most at risk among resident divers. This study is an important tool in uncovering the most common victims of diving and the related risk factors. It also highlights the problems present in the legal and medical monitoring of recreational divers and discusses possible pre-event, event, and post-event preventive actions that could lead to reduced mortality rates in divers.


Medical Hypotheses | 2009

Toxicology and methods of committing suicide other than overdose

Miran Čoklo; Valter Stemberga; Drazen Cuculic; Ivan Sosa; Alan Bosnar

Suicide represents a serious public health problem throughout the world. Toxicology plays a crucial role in the investigation of suicide. Psychoactive substances are recognized in the literature as the main suicide-generating stimuli. Ethanol is known to produce disinhibition and increased self-confidence. Other psychoactive substances can predominantly be central nervous system (CNS) stimulants or depressors. In cases of overdose as a method of suicide, the link between toxicology and the method of suicide is a matter of common sense and requires no additional explanation. On the other hand, in cases of non-overdose suicides this link is much more complex, and has not yet been extensively elucidated. We hypothesize a close relationship between toxicology and the choice of the method of committing suicide other than overdose. Negative findings may reflect either poor prescribed drug compliance in psychiatric patients, or suggest the role of other (non-toxicological) suicide-generating stimuli. On the other hand, positive findings influence the choice of the suicide method in a way that it depends on the prevalence of either stimulation or depression of the CNS, and consequent degree of behavioral aggression. Simplified, if the prevailing effect is CNS stimulation (with an increase in aggression), the method would be more drastic and more immediately fatal one, while with the CNS depression the method would be less immediately fatal and less drastic. There are only a few studies on the prevalence of psychoactive substances amongst completed suicides and even fewer studies have attempted to examine the relationship between substances used and the circumstances surrounding suicide. In evaluation of our hypothesis, we suggest thorough studies of toxicology and the choice of methods of committing suicides other than overdose. The scientific knowledge gained this way will eventually make toxicology a useful target in suicide prevention, especially amongst younger population.


Forensic Science International | 2013

Car-to-pedestrian accident with a unique decollement injury

Valter Stemberga; Anita Barisic; Miran Čoklo; Ivan Sosa; Alan Bosnar

The authors present a unique case of decollement injury found on an 85-year-old victim that was run-over by a tank truck. While external examination evidenced multiple severe injuries, autopsy confirmed the preliminary findings and revealed also the presence of an extensive decollement that spread from the left hemithorax to a wound on the left ankle, through which parts of the small intestines and pertaining mesentery protruded. The article offers an interpretation of the injuries sustained by the victim, focusing on the most probable decollement mechanism. The forensic pathologist in this case could rely also on the valuable help of surveillance cameras of a nearby bank office that helped to better understand the events that brought to the fatal injuries. The authors concluded that the expulsion of the jejunum was produced by a combination of two movements: a forward passage that created the decollement and detachment of the jejunum and a backward movement that completed the expulsion of the jejunum through the open fracture of the ankle. This case report evidences the importance of the forensic pathologist and a correct and detailed investigation of injuries in reconstructing an accident, as well that of surveillance cameras as investigation tool in forensic cases.


Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine | 2013

The assessment of lens opacity postmortem and its implication in forensics

Valter Stemberga; Damir Kovacevic; Miran Čoklo; Neven Simicevic; Alan Bosnar

Visual impairment, mostly due to cataracts, has been demonstrated to be an important factor associated with traffic accidents. Although vision screening is standard procedure during licensing in order to prevent motor vehicle accidents, an eye exam is not typically administered after an accident has already occurred. Postmortem assessment of lens opacity in victims of car accidents would provide helpful information for attesting to the liability of the parties in specific accidents, determining the circumstances of the accident, and developing preventive measures for both drivers and pedestrians alike. In this paper, we explore the use of different methods and their limitations for assessing lens opacity postmortem. We discuss the possible use and benefits of a simple, but as-yet untested method: retrobulbar translucency. The method would be based on the recording of shadows formed by opaque regions of the lens while the eye is illuminated from the back with a rigid source of light. The efficacy and objectivity of the method, its reproducibility, and the inter- and intra-observer error should be tested before implementing such a technique to be regularly used to determine lens opacity in cadavers.


Virus Research | 2018

Herpes simplex virus 1 miRNA sequence variations in latently infected human trigeminal ganglia.

Maja Cokarić Brdovčak; Andreja Zubković; Antun Ferenčić; Ivan Sosa; Valter Stemberga; Drazen Cuculic; Filip Rokić; Oliver Vugrek; Michael Hackenberg; Igor Jurak

Human herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) expresses numerous miRNAs, the function of which is not well understood. Several qualitative and quantitative analyses of HSV-1 miRNAs have been performed on infected cells in culture and animal models, however, there is very limited knowledge of their expression in human samples. We sequenced small-RNA libraries of RNA derived from human trigeminal ganglia latently infected with HSV-1 and Varicella zoster virus (VZV) and detected only a small subset of HSV-1 miRNA. The most abundantly expressed miRNAs are miR-H2, miRNA that regulates the expression of immediate early gene ICP0, and miR-H3 and -H4, both miRNAs expressed antisense to the transcript encoding the major neurovirulence factor ICP34.5. The sequence of many HSV-1 miRNAs detected in human samples was different from the sequences deposited in miRBase, which might significantly affect targeted functional analyses.


Medicina Fluminensis | 2018

Drowning in forensic medicine – an overview and incidence during the 30 years period at the Department of Forensic Medicine and Criminalistics in Rijeka

Antun Ferenčić; Ivan Sosa; Valter Stemberga; Dražen Cuculić

Prikazom smrti do koje se dolazi utapanjem, cestom nesrecom u cijoj je podlozi asfiksija, pružamo jedinstven pogled na noviju literaturu, te se n


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2015

Alagille syndrome case report: implications for forensic pathology and anthropology

Damir Miletić; Sanja Štifter; Mario Šlaus; Valter Stemberga

This case report offers a multidisciplinary interpretation of the violent death of a 4-year-old girl suffering from Alagille syndrome who died after a low-height fall that resulted in temporal bone fracture and a large epidural hematoma. The article evidences the macroscopical and microscopical characteristics of the syndrome, focusing especially on the skeletal findings that emerged during autopsy. In the case report, distinction is made between a possible accidental or non-accidental nature of the injuries and the characteristics of the injury have been interpreted in the light of the existing data on Alagille syndrome. In conclusion, the death was documented as accidental since abnormalities in the skeletal system evidenced during autopsy have predisposed the death of the child albeit through a very mild head trauma. The case report evidences the importance of studying features of skull macro- and microstructure in patients with Alagille syndrome, which have been, until now, underreported in literature and which might contribute to fracture vulnerability in these patients. Although rare, Alagille syndrome is a condition that should be known to forensic medicine practitioners and whose features and peculiarities must be taken into consideration in pediatric autopsy and suspected child abuse cases.


Forensic Science International | 2007

Pedestrian traffic fatalities in southwestern Croatia

Miran Čoklo; Alan Bosnar; Valter Stemberga

Pedestrians are often considered the most vulnerable group of road users. The aim of our study was to analyze the forensic aspects of pedestrian traffic fatalities in Rijeka region. We analyzed pedestrian fatalities in a 5-year period (2002-2006), which included 44 fatally injured pedestrians examined at the Rijeka Institute of Forensic Medicine. The male:female ratio was 1:1. The median age was 57 (ranging from 2-95), with 66% aging over 60 and 89% aging over 40. The least of the accidents happened in July and during weekend. Almost 65% of the fatally injured pedestrians were sober (0.00 g/kg) and 24% had blood alcohol level of more than 1.50 g/kg. Our study showed that pedestrian fatalities in Rijeka region have specific forensic characteristics. These findings suggest the necessity of the specific approach and caution in planning of prevention measures for specific traffic fatalities, in this case pedestrian ones.

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