
doi: 10.1007/bf02340826
pmid: 1520639
Methods in current practice for ascertaining time of death are largely based on the cooling of the body after death and are somewhat unreliable. A theoretical relationship is known to exist between the decline in the properties defining nerve conduction and time after death caused by the gradual cessation of metabolic activity in nerves. A number of such properties were measured in rats during life and after death. In most cases the relationship was found to be inconsistent. The chronaxie of the strength duration curve for the sciatic nerve was, however, found to increase consistently and reproducibly in a linear fashion over the first 90 min after death to a plateau value which was maintained beyond 135 min. These findings are discussed as the possible basis of a forensic method of determining the duration of the "post mortem interval" within the first few hours after death.
Male, Time Factors, Neural Conduction, Action Potentials, Rats, Inbred Strains, Forensic Medicine, Sciatic Nerve, Body Temperature, Rats, Electrophysiology, Bias, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Postmortem Changes, Animals
Male, Time Factors, Neural Conduction, Action Potentials, Rats, Inbred Strains, Forensic Medicine, Sciatic Nerve, Body Temperature, Rats, Electrophysiology, Bias, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Postmortem Changes, Animals
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