FORENSIC MEDICINE DICTIONARY - DICTIONNAIRE DE MÉDECINE LÉGALE
L - Z
University of Minnesota Forensics Laceration Lacération Laudanum Laudanum (alcoholic tincture of opium / teinture alcoolique d'opium) Loose contact wound Plaie à bout portant Maimed person Mutilé(e) Maimings Mutilations Maternal death Décès maternel MAU Métallogramme Atomique Urinaire (confirmation et quantification d'empoisonnement par les métaux lourds) Medical certificate of death Certificat de décès Medico-legal autopsy Autopsie médico-légale Medico-legal procedures Procédures médico-légales Medico-legal report Expertise médico-légale Morbid anatomical examination Examen anatomopathologique Morbid anatomical lesions Lésions anatomopathologiques Morbid anatomy and histopathology Anatomie pathologique Morbid anatomy laboratory Laboratoire anatomopathologique Mortal Mortel(-elle) Mortiferous Mortifère Mortuary Morgue Motion sickness Mal des transports MTBI Mild Traumatic Brain Injury -See PubMed MTBI Muzzle imprint, muzzle stamp Empreinte laissée par l'extrémité d`une arme à feu Natural death Mort naturelle Necrophagous Nécrophage Necrophanerosis Modifications cadavériques Necrophilism Nécrophilisme Necrophily Nécrophilie Necrophilous Nécrophile Necrophorous Nécrophore Necropsy Nécropsie (post-mortem examination Syn. Autopsy) Necroscopy Nécropsie Necrosis Nécrose Necrotic .adj. Nécrosé(e) Necrotic degeneration Mortification Necrotomy Nécrotomie Neuronal death Mort neuronale NIFS National Institute of Forensic Science (AU) Odontologist Odontologue Odontology Odontologie Opium
W.G. Aitchison Robertson, Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology (1922). Organ Organe Organ removal for scientific purposes Prélèvement d'organe à but médico-scientifique Ornithine decarboxylase Ornithine décarboxylase Oxidative decarboxylation Décarboxylation oxydative (oxydoréduction d'un corps avec libération d'une molécule de gaz carbonique, CO2) Pancreas Pancréas (organe offrant la caractéristique de se putréfier rapidement) Pathologist Pathologiste Pathology Pathologie Perinatal death Décès périnatal (mort de l'enfant entre la 28ème semaine de gestation et la 7ème journée après la naissance) Petechiae Pétéchie - See PubMed Petechiae Pharinx Pharinx Post head-injury disability Séquelles d'un traumatisme crânien Posthumous child Enfant posthume (child born after the death of his father) Post-mortal emasculation Émasculation post-mortem Post-mortem birth Accouchement post mortem Post-mortem heat hematoma Hématome par brûlure post-mortem Post-mortem lividity Lat. Livor mortis Lividité cadavérique, sugillation cadavérique, Lat. Sugillatio, tache cadavérique Post-mortem study Autopsie médico-scientifique Post-mortem inspection Inspection post mortem Postmortem stain Tache post-mortem Pregnancy resulting from rape Grossesse résultant d'un viol Prenatal death Décès prénatal (mort utérine du foetus entre la 28ème semaine de gestation et la naissance) Prepubertal victim Victime prépubère Protein putrefaction Putréfaction protidique Ptomaines Ptomaïnes, bases cadavériques, alcaloïdes animaux. Bases azotées toxiques proches des alcaloïdes (cadavérine, putrescine) se formant lors de la décomposition par décarboxylation des matières azotées. - DRB -
PTSD Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (same as SSPT) - See PubMed PTSD Putrefaction Putréfaction Putrescine Putrescine ( 1,4-diaminobutane, C4H12N2 or H2N.(CH2)4.NH2 ) Basic crystals amine formed by decarboxylation of ornithine during the putrefaction, melting point 23 °C . - DRB - Rape Viol The definition of rape which we have given is not altogether satisfactory. Take, for example, the case of a woman who goes to bed expecting her husband to return at a certain hour. The lodger, let us say, takes advantage of this fact, and, getting into bed, has connection with her, she not resisting, assuming all the while that it is her husband. This is rape, but it is not 'by force,' and it is not 'against her will,' but it is 'without her consent,' as she has not been fully informed as to all the circumstances of the case. In all cases of rape in which there is no actual resistance or objection, consent may be assumed. It is not essential that the woman should state in so many words that she does not object. The force used may be moral and not physical e.g., threats, fear, horror, syncope. By 48 and 49 Vict., c. 49, the carnal knowledge of a girl under thirteen is technically rape. The consent of the girl makes no difference, since she is not of an age to become a consenting party. An attempt at carnal knowledge of a girl under thirteen is a misdemeanour. Her consent makes no difference, and even the solicitation of the act on the part of the child will not exonerate the accused. Intercourse with a girl between thirteen and sixteen, even with her consent, is a misdemeanour. This Act is a favourite with the blackmailer. The child is sent out to solicit, dressed like a woman, but appears in the witness-box in a much more juvenile costume. To constitute rape there must be penetration, but this may be of the slightest. There may be a sufficient degree of penetration to constitute rape without rupturing the hymen. Proof of actual emission is now unnecessary. The subject of carnal knowledge (C.K.) or its attempt may be summed up as follows :
It is a misdemeanour to give to a woman any drug so as to stupefy her, and so enable any person to have unlawful connection with her. False charges of rape are very often made. The motive may be to extort blackmail, revenge, or mere delusion. On examining such cases bruises are seldom found, but scratches which the woman has made on the front of her body may be discovered, and the local injuries to the generative organs are slight, if present at all. Physical Signs. In the adult the hymen may be ruptured, the fourchette lacerated, and blood found on the parts, together with scratches and other marks and signs of a struggle. In the child there may be no hæmorrhage, but there will be indications of bruising on the external organs, with probably considerable laceration of the hymen, the laceration in some cases extending into the rectum. Severe hæmorrhage, and even death, may follow the rape of a young child. The patient will have difficulty in walking, and in passing water and fæces. After some hours the parts are very tender and swollen, and a sticky greenish-yellow discharge is present. These signs last longer in children than in adults ; but as a rule in the adult, at least all signs of rape disappear in three or four days. Young and delicate children may suffer from a vaginal discharge, with swelling of the external genitals, simulating an attempt at rape. Infantile leucorrha is common, and many innocent people have been exposed to danger from false charges of rape on children, instituted as a means of levying blackmail. A knowledge of these facts suggests the necessity of giving a guarded opinion when children are brought for examination in suspected cases. Pregnancy may follow rape. Seminal stains render the clothing stiff and greyish-yellow in colour, with translucent edges. On being moistened they give the characteristic seminal odour. Semen may be found on the linen of the woman and man, and will be recognized under the microscope by the presence in it of spermatozoa, minute filamentary bodies with a pear-shaped head ; but it must not be forgotten that the non-detection of spermatozoa is no proof of absence of sexual intercourse, for these bodies are not always present in the semen of even healthy adult young men. Spermatozoa must not be mistaken for the Trichomonas vaginæ found in the vaginæ of some women. The latter have cilia surrounding the head, which is globular. Florence's Micro-Chemical Test for Spermatic Fluid. If a drop of the fluid obtained by wetting a supposed spermatic stain be mixed with a drop of the following solution (KI, parts 1.65 ; pure iodine, 2.54 ; distilled water, 30) in a watch-glass, brownish-red pointed crystals resembling hæmin crystals are obtained. Barberio's Test. Mix a drop of the spermatic stain with a drop of a saturated solution of picric acid, when needle-shaped yellow rhombic crystals are formed. Gonorrhal Stains. A cover-glass preparation stained with methylene blue reveals the gonococci lying in pairs within the leucocytes. », W.G. Aitchison Robertson Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology (1922). Rape of children Viol d'enfants - See PubMed Rape of children Recrement Récrément Repeating rifle Fusil à répétition Respiratory arrest, respiratory failure Arrêt respiratoire Resuscitation Réanimation Ritual removal of the clitoris Excision rituelle du clitoris Routine orders Bulletin médico-administratif Saponification Lat. Saponis / Soap
/ Savon Saponification Saponin Saponine Sapotoxin Sapotoxine (any poisonous saponins) Sapraemia Saprémie (presence of products, such as ptomaines, of putrefactive bacteria in the blood) Saprobic Saprobe (Fauna and flora leaving on decaying organic matters or in soul waters) Saprobiotic .Gre. Sapros / Putrid / Putride Saprobiotique Saprogenic, saprogenous Saprogène (producing or feeding from products causing putrefaction) Saprophagous Saprophage (Fauna feeding on decaying matters) Saprophyte Saprophyte (Flora living on decaying matters) Saprophytically .adv. Saprophytiquement Saprophytism Saprophytisme Saprogenic, saprogenous Saprogène SCD Sudden Cardiac Death Scopolamine Scopolamine See Serum of truth Scrape Éraflure Sea squill Lat. Scilla maritima, Urginea scilla, Urginea maritima Liliaceae Charpentaire, grande scille, oignon marin, scille maritime, squille See Cardiac glycosides Self-murder Suicide Self-mutilation Auto-mutilation - See PubMed Self-mutilation Serum of truth Sérum de vérité Sexual assault Agression sexuelle Shaken baby (or infant) syndrome Syndrome de l'enfant secoué Shearing fracture Fracture par torsion Shock death Mort par choc Side arm wound Blessure par armes blanches Signs produced by close-range shots Signes de coups de feu à bout portants Silo worker's asphyxia Mort due à l'asphyxie par ensevelissement dans un silo Simulated drowning Noyade simulée, fausse noyade Single cause of death Cause simple de décès Skull fracture Fracture du crâne Skull Punch Poinçon crânien Small arms Armes portatives SMLC Société de Médecine Légale et de Criminologie de France Social death État végétatif Sodium hypochlorite Hypochlorite de sodium, eau de Javel SOFT Society of Forensic Toxicologists Spalding sign Signe de spalding (Overlapping of fetal skull bones indicating foetal death / Chevauchement des os de la calotte cranienne du foetus indiquant la mort de celui-ci) Specificity of genes Empreintes génétiques (identification technique) Sperm Sperme Spiral fracture Fracture par torsion SRMLB Société Royale de Médecine Légale de Belgique / Royal belgian society of legal medicine SSPT Syndrome de Stress Post-Traumatique (-Idem PTSD) Stillborn Mort-né(e) Strangulation Étranglement (compression ou constriction de la trachée) Strangulation mark(s) Marque(s) de strangulation Strangulation psychosis Psychose post-strangulatoire Stray shot Balle perdue Sudden death Mort subite Suicide Suicide
Sunstroke Insolation « The person loses consciousness and falls down insensible ; the body temperature may be 112° F., the pulse is full, and a peculiar pungent odour is given off from the skin. Coma, convulsions with (rarely) delirium, may precede death. Treatment consists in lowering the body temperature by application of cold cloths, stimulants, strychnine or digitalin hypodermically. », W.G. Aitchison Robertson Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology (1922). Syncope Syncope « Syncope is death beginning at the heart in other words, failure of circulation. It may arise from (1) Anæmia, or deficiency of blood due to hæmorrhage, such as occurs in injuries, or from bleeding from the lungs, stomach, uterus, or other internal organs. (2) Asthenia, or failure of the heart's action, met with in starvation, in exhausting diseases, such as phthisis, cancer, pernicious anæmia, and Bright's disease, and in some cases of poisoning for example, aconite. The symptoms of syncope are faintness, giddiness, pallor, slow, weak, and irregular pulse, sighing respiration, insensibility, dilated pupils, and convulsions. Post mortem the heart is found empty and contracted. When, however, there is sudden stoppage of the heart, the right and left cavities contain blood in the normal quantities, and blood is found in the venæ cavæ and in the arterial trunks. There is no engorgement of either lungs or brain. », W.G. Aitchison Robertson Aids to Forensic Medicine and Toxicology (1922). TASA Technical Advisory Service for Attorneys (CA) Tearing away Arrachement Termination of pregnancy for rape or incest Interruption volontaire de grossesse éthique Testicle injury Traumatisme du testicule Thanatologist Thanatologue Thanatology Thanatologie TIAFT The International Association of Forensic Toxicologists TJ Turgescence Jugulaire Torsion of the testicle Torsion du testicule Tortured to death Torturé(e) à mort Total circulatory arrest Arrêt total de la circulation Tourniquet paralysis Paralysie par garrot Trachea Trachée Traumatic gangrene Gangrène nosocomiale Traumatology Traumatology Truth serum Sérum de vérité TS Tentative de Suicide UAM Urinary Atomic Metallogram (same as MAU) - See HAM Unnatural death Mort non naturelle Violent death Mort violente VIFM Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine (AU) Wound Plaie, blessure
Wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm Coups et blessures avec préméditation |
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BELAIR DICTIONARIES - DICTIONNAIRES BELAIR - DICCIONARIOS BELAIR - DIZIONARIOS BELAIR
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