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Reviewing for the fall.
Algor Mortis
Algor Mortis is the name given to the loss of a body's temperature after death. If the body is found within 24 hours following death it may be possible to use temperature to estimate the time of death provided the following conditions are met:
1. The body has been in a place that has remained at normal room temperature without extreme heat or cold
2. The victim's pre-death temperature was not elevated for example by illness
3. The victim was not wearing clothes that may have insulated the body for example a thermal winter coat
With a normal body temperature of 37° celsius before death, the body cools at a rate of 1-1.5°C per hour. Taking an internal temperature and subtracting it from 37°C provides an estimated time of death. For example, a dead body with a temperature of 34°C would suggest the person died between 3 to 4.5 hours ago.
Post-Mortem Lividity
Post-mortem lividity, also known as hypostasis, is the staining visible on the skin of a dead body, this happens when gravity causes the blood to settle after death This occurs across the entire lower side of the body but in places where parts of the body are in contact with a solid object, such as the floor, the flesh compresses and staining does not occur in that area although blanching can be visible. It is recognisable by its distinctive reddish-purple, or sometimes blueish-purple, colouring and is usually visible within an hour of death but more pronounced around 4 hours after death. Within the first 4 hours, these stains are not fixed and if the body is moved the blood will shift and stain the part of the body that becomes lower. Depending on the conditions the body is kept in, these stains become fixed between 8 and 24 hours after death.
Post-mortem lividity can be useful for murder investigations as it can indicate how the body was left, for example, if the stains are not at the lowest part of the body it can indicate the body has been moved after the 8-24 hour staining period.
Rigor Mortis
Rigor Mortis is the scientific term used to describe the stiffening of the muscles of a body after death. A dead body goes from flaccid/limp muscles to one where all the muscles become contracted and stiff, this causes the entire body to be constricted into a fixed position. The muscles then eventually become limp again.
At normal room temperature, this has a time progression of around 36 hours and three 12 hour stages. The initial stiffening of muscles takes 12 hours, the body remains stiff for 12 hours and then progressively becomes limp over 12 hours.
More precisely, the small muscles in the hands and face are usually the first to stiffen and stiffen during the first 2-6 hours, the larger muscles take longer. The rate of rigor mortis can differ for infants, people with high muscles development such as bodybuilders or where there was extensive muscle use just before death for example a violent struggle.
Rigor mortis can be used to determine death and the determinations are as follows:
If the body feels warm and is flaccid, it has been dead for less than 3 hours
If the body feels warm and is stiff, it has been dead for 3 to 8 hours
If the body feels cold and stiff, it has been dead for 8 to 36 hours
If the body feels cold and is flaccid, it has been dead for more than 36 hours.
I missed my team while I was away for winter break.