Beta
264906

Wound Age Estimation: Pro-inflammatory Cytokines versus Immuno-histochemistry

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

Subjects

-

Tags

-

Abstract

Rationale and background: In forensic medical investigations, it is an important matter to determine whether a wound found on autopsy was inflicted before or after death and, if inflicted ante-mortem, how long before death it was sustained. Aim of the work: This work was directed to compare the biochemical inflammatory cytokines (IL1-β and IL6) and immunohistochemical (TGF-α) techniques as tools for determining wound aging in cadavers and their relation to other factors related to the wound.
Subjects and methods: Specimens of skin and subcutaneous tissue were taken from 50 cadavers with wounds other than firearms and with known postmortem interval. They were 11 females (22%) and 39 males (78%), their mean age was 30.3±19.88 years with minimum age of 4 months and maximum of 82 years. Wound specimens were taken from every case to estimate IL1-β and IL6 by ELISA technique and for evaluation of TGF-α by immuno-histochemistry.
Results: Significant correlations between the age of the victim and the value of both IL6 and IL1-β were reported. Moreover, no significant difference between males and females concerning the cytokines IL1-β and Cytokines IL6 was found. There was no significant correlation between the time between injury and death and both IL6 and IL1-β values but, there was a significant negative correlation between time between death and autopsy and the value of IL1-β. However, similar correlation was not detected concerning IL6. So, both TGF-α and IL6 were found to be independent predictors for wound age determination while IL1-β was a dependent one.
In this study, the estimation of the wound age, time between injury and death as well as time between death and autopsy could be calculated using specific regression equations.
Conclusion and recommendations:
The quantitative analysis of pro-inflammatory cytokines in wound extracts can contribute to the determination of vitality and wound age.

DOI

10.21608/ejfsat.2022.151781.1262

Keywords

Transforming growth factor alpha, Interleukin-1B, interleukin sex

Authors

First Name

Nevein

Last Name

El-Dessouky

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

Forensic medicine and clinical toxicology. faculty of medicine, Cairo university, Cairo, Egypt

Email

neveendawood359@gmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Manal

Last Name

Ismail

MiddleName

Mohy El-Din

Affiliation

Forensic medicine and clinical toxicology, faculty of medicine ,cairo university, Cairo, Egypt

Email

manalmohy@hotmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Laila

Last Name

Rashed

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

Department of Biochemisty - Kasr Alainy School of Medicine - Cairo University

Email

lailaahmedrashed@gmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Wael

Last Name

Ibraheem

MiddleName

Shawky

Affiliation

Pathology, Faculty of medicine, Cairo university

Email

wael.shawky@kasralainy.edu.eg

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

El-Gebely

MiddleName

Nabil Soliman

Affiliation

Forensic medicine and toxicology, Faculty of medicine, Suez canal university

Email

moh_elgebely@hotmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

Volume

22

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

36933

Issue Date

2022-09-01

Receive Date

2022-07-29

Publish Date

2022-09-01

Page Start

43

Page End

58

Print ISSN

1687-0875

Online ISSN

2535-1915

Link

https://ejfsat.journals.ekb.eg/article_264906.html

Detail API

https://ejfsat.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=264906

Order

264,906

Type

Original Article

Type Code

429

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences and Applied Toxicology

Publication Link

https://ejfsat.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

-

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023