4.4 Article

Technical note: early post-mortem changes of human bone in taphonomy with μCT

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LEGAL MEDICINE
Volume 131, Issue 3, Pages 761-770

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00414-016-1509-y

Keywords

Technical note; Forensic science; Forensic anthropology; Post-morteminterval; MicroCT; Taphonomy

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Post-mortem interval (PMI) estimation is an important issue in forensic medicine, particularly for criminal purposes and legal limitation periods. The goal of the present study is to examine the evolution of the trabecular cranial vault bone after 4 weeks of conservation in a controlled environment with micro-tomography (mu CT) analyses. Four bone samples were extracted from a fresh human cranial vault (a donation to science according to the French law) and conserved in an air-controlled environment. The samples were weighed and mu CT scanned at a 10-mu m resolution every week after death for a month. The mu CT features were identical for every sample. Each set of data from the mu CTs was reconstructed, registered, and analyzed in terms of the total volume, bone volume, bone surface, number of trabeculae, trabeculae thickness, and mean distance of the trabeculae. The samples were conserved in a glass box in 20 degrees C air with 60% humidity in a laboratory hood between each mu CT acquisition. Descriptive statistics were determined. Each sample was observed and compared to itself over time. After 1 month of conservation, the mean bone volume (-1.9%), bone surface (-5.1%), and trabecular number (-12.35%) decreased, whereas the mean trabecular separation (+5.55%) and trabecular thickness (+12.7%) increased. Many variations (i.e., increases and decreases) were observed between the extraction of the sample and the end of the 4 weeks of conservation. The present observations may be explained by bone diagenesis. Previous observations have indicated that protein and lipid losses occur with bone weight and volume losses. These diagenesis effects may explain the trabecular modifications observed in the present work. We observed many bone variations with the mu CT scans between the beginning and the end of the conservation that had no explanations. Additional studies, particularly studies involving statistics, need to be performed to confirm our observations and explain these results more clearly.

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