Volume 53, Issue 4 pp. 956-961

Disaster Victim Identification: New Applications for Postmortem Computed Tomography

Soren Blau Ph.D.

Soren Blau Ph.D.

Centre for Human Identification, Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine/Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, 3006 Vic., Australia.

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Shelley Robertson F.R.C.P.A.

Shelley Robertson F.R.C.P.A.

Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine/Department of Forensic Medicine, Monash University, 3006 Vic., Australia.

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Marnie Johnstone

Marnie Johnstone

Disaster Victim Identification/Chemical, Biological & Radiological Crime Scene Unit, Macleod, Vic., Australia.

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First published: 04 July 2008
Citations: 85
Additional information and reprint requests:
Soren Blau, Ph.D.
Centre for Human Identification
Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine
Department of Forensic Medicine
Monash University
57-83 Kavanagh Street
Southbank, 3006 Vic.
Australia
E-mail address: [email protected]

Abstract

Abstract: Mass fatalities can present the forensic anthropologist and forensic pathologist with a different set of challenges to those presented by a single fatality. To date radiography has played an important role in the disaster victim identification (DVI) process. The aim of this paper is to highlight the benefits of applying computed tomography (CT) technology to the DVI process. The paper begins by reviewing the extent to which sophisticated imaging techniques, specifically CT, have been increasingly used to assist in the analysis of deceased individuals. A small scale case study is then presented which describes aspects of the DVI process following a recent Australian aviation disaster involving two individuals. Having grided the scene of the disaster, a total of 41 bags of heavily disrupted human remains were collected. A postmortem examination was subsequently undertaken. Analysis of the CT images of all body parts (n = 162) made it possible not only to identify and side differentially preserved skeletal elements which were anatomically unrecognizable in the heavily disrupted body masses, but also to observe and record useful identifying features such as surgical implants. In this case the role of the forensic anthropologist and CT technology were paramount in facilitating a quick identification, and subsequently, an effective and timely reconciliation, of body parts. Although this case study is small scale, it illustrates the enormous potential for CT imaging to complement the existing DVI process.

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