Richard Sivulič, Martin Janík, Veronika Rybárová, Filip Babiak, Ľubomír Straka
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Claws and canines: injury patterns following European brown bear attacks.
In recent years, bear attacks in Slovakia have increased, including two fatal attacks. The first fatality involved a 63-year-old man who was attacked by a brown bear while hiking with his family. He sustained grievous injuries to the left thigh and died at the scene shortly after the attack. In the second case, a 58-year-old man was found dead near a walking trail, and recent bear prints were found nearby. The man sustained various blunt and sharp injuries to the head and right upper extremity, strongly suggesting a bear attack. The cause of death was severance of the cervical spinal cord. Both victims presented with similar topographical and patterned injuries, which were consistent with biting and clawing. Sets of similar penetrating wounds arranged in rectangular patterns were also found on both victims. Differentiating such injuries from homicidal or self-inflicted wounds is of pivotal medico-legal importance. This paper provides a detailed analysis, visualization and assessment of wound morphology following fatal bear attacks.
期刊介绍:
Forensic Science, Medicine and Pathology encompasses all aspects of modern day forensics, equally applying to children or adults, either living or the deceased. This includes forensic science, medicine, nursing, and pathology, as well as toxicology, human identification, mass disasters/mass war graves, profiling, imaging, policing, wound assessment, sexual assault, anthropology, archeology, forensic search, entomology, botany, biology, veterinary pathology, and DNA. Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology presents a balance of forensic research and reviews from around the world to reflect modern advances through peer-reviewed papers, short communications, meeting proceedings and case reports.