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[2019] 2. Eun Sil Jang, SangHan Lee |
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Poster :
Date : 19-03-05 11:15
Hit : 715
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Publication; issue : 2019 Year 43 Vol 1 iss 7 p
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(480.7K), Down : 69, 2019-03-05 11:15:55 | |
Significance of Knife Tip Injuries as
Hesitation Marks
Korean J Leg Med 2019;43:7-15
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Graduate School of Forensic and
Investigative Science, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Korea,
Department of Forensic Medicine, School of
Medicine, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Korea
E-mail: sanghan1@knu.ac.kr
Hesitation wounds are tentative,
superficial incised wounds around the fatal wound(s). This study aimed to
investigate the frequency and characteristic features of hesitation wounds
including ordinary incised wounds and knife tip injuries as hesitation marks
from the autopsy cases of suicides using sharp force instruments. The subjects
were 478 cases out of 3,131 suicide cases autopsied at the Department of
Forensic Medicine, School of Medicine, Kyungpook National University in Daegu,
from August, 2001 to 2013. 48 cases (approximately 10%) were suicides using
sharp force instruments. In 27 cases (56.3%), the sharp force was successfully
applied causing suicide; 17 cases (35.4%) were so called complex suicide cases,
in which two or more different methods including sharp force injury were used;
and the 4 remaining cases were suicides caused by other reasons. Overall
hesitation wounds had a high frequency of 33/48 cases (68.8%). The frequency of
cases in which knife tip injuries were found was lower, appearing in 13/33
cases (39.3%). The most preferred sites of knife tip injuries were the abdomen
(9 cases), neck (4 cases), chest (3 cases), and face (1 case) in these 13
cases, including several overlapped cases. The average number of knife tip
injuries was 14.6. A total of 88.2% of knife tip injuries was found near the
incised hesitation wounds or fatal wounds. In conclusion, knife tip injuries
may be a significant factor in identifying hesitation wounds, and they should be
precisely examined and evaluated during autopsies to determine the manner of
death.
Key Words: Sharp force injury; Hesitation
wound; Knife tip injury; Suicide;
Complex suicide
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