An Epidemiological Study of Suffocation Deaths In Twin Cities of South India

Authors

  • Gandla Bala Maddileti Assistant Professor, Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552
  • Sujan Kumar Mohanty Assist. Prof Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552
  • Virendra Kumar Prof & HOD Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552
  • K Bhaskar Reddy Prof, Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552
  • V Bhuvan Tutor Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552
  • K Yamini Tutor Dept. of Forensic Medicine Meenakshi Medical College & Research Institute Kanchipuram, Tamilnadu India 631552

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/

Keywords:

Autopsy, Domestic Violence, Suffocation, Smothering, Traumatic Asphyxia

Abstract

In spite of advancement in medical facilities, the end of life is inevitable. Suffocation deaths have  increased over the years and are becoming a large group in medico legal autopsies. In such deaths, a  detailed and meticulous autopsy plays a major role to solve the case, while the scene visit and collection  of samples have their own significance. To analyse the recent trends such as manner, methods, motive  etc., in suffocation deaths, a prospective study was conducted for two years period. 34 suffocation deaths  were studied, which comprised 0.18% of all Forensic autopsies; 38.23% of the cases were aged between  21-30 years. Males constituted 67.63% of all the cases. The most frequent method of suffocation death  was smothering (35.29%) followed by environmental and traumatic asphyxia (20.58%), choking (17.64%)  and positional asphyxia (5.88%). The most common manner of suffocation was found to be accidental  (67.64%). But in homicidal cases (29%), the common motive was domestic disputes. Only 30% of  suffocation victims were found positive for blood alcohol.  

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Published

2015-10-30

How to Cite

Maddileti, G. B., Mohanty, S. K., Kumar, V., Reddy, K. B., Bhuvan, V., & Yamini , K. (2015). An Epidemiological Study of Suffocation Deaths In Twin Cities of South India . Journal of Indian Academy of Forensic Medicine, 37(3), 232-236. https://doi.org/10.48165/