Indian Internet Journal of Forensic Medicine & Toxicology
  • Year: 2012
  • Volume: 10
  • Issue: 4

Nasal ciliary motility: A new tool in estimating the time of death

  • Author:
  • Maria Carolina Romanelli1, Matteo Gelardi1, Maria Luisa Fiorella1, Lucia Tattoli1, Giancarlo Di Vella1, Biagio Solarino1
  • Total Page Count: 1
  • Published Online: Dec 1, 2012
  • Page Number: 116 to 116

1International Journal of Legal Medicine 2012; 126: 427–433

Abstract

Determination of time since death is one of the most difficult and crucial issue in forensic medicine. Apart from body cooling, which is commonly used in the early postmortem interval (PMI), supravital reactions are the most interesting postmortem changes for time of death estimation. Nasal ciliary motility has been occasionally observed in postmortem period although no studies have focused on this phenomenon for forensic purposes. We aimed to evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of ciliary motility as a potential tool in estimating the time of death. Specimens of ciliated epithelium from 100 consecutive cadavers were obtained by scraping the nasal mucosa at three different postmortem intervals. The samples were then smeared on a slide, and an in vitro evaluation of ciliary movement was analyzed by phase-contrast microscopy. A postmortem nasal ciliary motility was observed, and a statistically significant relationship between decreasing ciliary movements and increasing postmortem interval was detected even in presence of putrefactive changes of nasal ultrastructure integrity. Some peculiar causes of death seem to influence ciliary motility in the early PMI, while no significant correlations with sex or age were observed. According to the results of this study, postmortem evaluation of nasal ciliary motility may be a bona fide and a feasible option for estimating the time of death.