MECHANISMS OF UNEXPECTED DEATH IN INFANTS AND YOUNG-CHILDREN FOLLOWING FOREIGN-BODY INGESTION

Authors
Citation
Rw. Byard, MECHANISMS OF UNEXPECTED DEATH IN INFANTS AND YOUNG-CHILDREN FOLLOWING FOREIGN-BODY INGESTION, Journal of forensic sciences, 41(3), 1996, pp. 438-441
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, Legal
ISSN journal
00221198
Volume
41
Issue
3
Year of publication
1996
Pages
438 - 441
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-1198(1996)41:3<438:MOUDII>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Fatal foreign body ingestion in childhood usually results in sudden an d unexpected death from acute upper airway occlusion. The most common age range for such episodes is one to three years. However, a variety of different mechanisms of death due to ingested foreign bodies may oc cur in children, including hemorrhage, acute cardiac tamponade, arrhyt hmia, centrally mediated respiratory arrest and sepsis. Sudden death m ay follow a protracted asymptomatic period and may also be due to fore ign bodies impacted in the esophagus. A review of cases has been under taken (N = 10; age = three and one-half months to seven years; M:F = 9 :1), which demonstrates the variety of lethal processes that may occur , the range of materials involved and the different anatomical sites w here problems can result.