TY - JOUR
T1 - Do bone elasticity and postmortem interval affect forensic fractographic analyses?
AU - Skinner, Jessica
AU - Langley, Natalie
AU - Joseph, Malin
AU - Herrick, James
AU - Brown, Robert
AU - Waletzki, Brian
AU - Goguen, Peter
AU - Shyamsunder, Loukham
AU - Rajan, Subramaniam
N1 - Funding Information:
Funded by the National Institute of Justice (NIJ‐2020‐17294) and the AAFS Forensic Sciences Foundation Lucas Grant.
Funding Information:
We offer gratitude to the selfless individuals who donate their bodies to science, without whom this research would not have been possible. Thanks also to the following individuals and organizations for access to laboratory equipment, financial support, and mentorship: Cheryl Myers, PhD, David Lott, MD, National Institute of Justice, and the AAFS Forensic Sciences Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Academy of Forensic Sciences.
PY - 2023/5
Y1 - 2023/5
N2 - Forensic fractographic features of bone reliably establish crack propagation in perimortem injuries. We investigated if similar fracture surface features characterize postmortem fractures. Experimentally induced peri- and postmortem fractures were used to assess if fractographic features vary as bone elasticity decreases during the postmortem interval (PMI). Thirty-seven unembalmed, defleshed human femoral shafts from males and females aged 33–81 years were fractured at varying PMIs with a drop test frame using a three-point bending setup and recorded with a high-speed camera. Vital statistics, cause of death, PMI length, temperature, humidity, collagen percentage, water loss, fracture energy, and fractography scores were recorded for each sample. Results showed that fractographic features associated with perimortem fractures were expressed in PMIs up to 40,600 accumulated degree hours (ADH), or 60 warm weather days. Hackle was the most consistently expressed feature, occurring in all fractures regardless of ADH. The most variable characteristics were wake features (78.4%) and arrest ridges (70.3%). Collagen percentage did not correlate strongly with ADH (r = −0.04, p = 0.81); however, there was a strong significant correlation between ADH and water loss (r = 0.74, p < 0.001). Multinomial logistic regression showed no association between fractographic feature expression and ADH or collagen percentage. In conclusion, forensic fractographic features reliably determine initiation and directionality of crack propagation in experimentally induced PMIs up to 40,600 ADH, demonstrating the utility of this method into the recent postmortem interval. This expression of reliable fractographic features throughout the early PMI intimates these characteristics may not be useful standalone features for discerning peri- versus postmortem fractures.
AB - Forensic fractographic features of bone reliably establish crack propagation in perimortem injuries. We investigated if similar fracture surface features characterize postmortem fractures. Experimentally induced peri- and postmortem fractures were used to assess if fractographic features vary as bone elasticity decreases during the postmortem interval (PMI). Thirty-seven unembalmed, defleshed human femoral shafts from males and females aged 33–81 years were fractured at varying PMIs with a drop test frame using a three-point bending setup and recorded with a high-speed camera. Vital statistics, cause of death, PMI length, temperature, humidity, collagen percentage, water loss, fracture energy, and fractography scores were recorded for each sample. Results showed that fractographic features associated with perimortem fractures were expressed in PMIs up to 40,600 accumulated degree hours (ADH), or 60 warm weather days. Hackle was the most consistently expressed feature, occurring in all fractures regardless of ADH. The most variable characteristics were wake features (78.4%) and arrest ridges (70.3%). Collagen percentage did not correlate strongly with ADH (r = −0.04, p = 0.81); however, there was a strong significant correlation between ADH and water loss (r = 0.74, p < 0.001). Multinomial logistic regression showed no association between fractographic feature expression and ADH or collagen percentage. In conclusion, forensic fractographic features reliably determine initiation and directionality of crack propagation in experimentally induced PMIs up to 40,600 ADH, demonstrating the utility of this method into the recent postmortem interval. This expression of reliable fractographic features throughout the early PMI intimates these characteristics may not be useful standalone features for discerning peri- versus postmortem fractures.
KW - accumulated degree hours
KW - bone elasticity
KW - bone fractures
KW - forensic anthropology
KW - forensic fractography
KW - perimortem trauma
KW - postmortem interval
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U2 - 10.1111/1556-4029.15237
DO - 10.1111/1556-4029.15237
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85152964192
SN - 0022-1198
VL - 68
SP - 757
EP - 767
JO - Journal of Forensic Sciences
JF - Journal of Forensic Sciences
IS - 3
ER -