Postmortem Bleed - An Artefact- A Case Report

Authors

  • Shivanand Tanwashi Senior Resident, Dept. of Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, Jawaharlal Medical College, Belagavi Karnataka 590010.
  • Siddharth Singh Senior Medical Officer, Dept. of Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, Govt. Barmer Medical College, Barmer Rajasthan 344001
  • Santosh Soni Senior Specialist, Dept. of Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, Dr. S N Medical college, Jodhpur Rajasthan 342003

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/jfmt.2026.43.01.02

Keywords:

Hanging; Hemorrhoids; Postmortem Bleed; Artefact

Abstract

Introduction: Artefact is any change caused or feature introduced in a body after death (accidental or physiologically  unrelated finding to the natural state of the body) that is likely to lead to misinterpretation of medico legally significant  ante mortem findings.  

Case details: This is a case of 24yr old male who hanged himself in a hotel room. Front foot were touching the floor  and heel slightly lifted up and there was frank blood on the floor just beneath the foot. Upon examining the body, dried  blood stains were present on both the lower limb and the origin of bleed was traced to anal orifice. After taking detailed  history the relatives mentioned that the person was suffering from hemorrhoids and was taking treatment for the same  from local hospital. During dissection anal mucosal tear was seen at 12’ O clock position. Multiple petechiae were also  seen on larynx and epiglo ttis. There were no signs of struggle or injury on body and the careful neck dissection did not  show any muscular haematoma or rupture of muscles. 

Conclusion: The time since death was about 24 to 36hr from time of postmortem examination. It was concluded as a post  mortem artefact, not an injury due to any foul play. 

 

References

Reddy, K. S. N., & Murty, O. P. (2022). The essentials of forensic medicine & toxicology (35th ed., p. 359). New Delhi: Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers.

Prinsloo, I., & Gordon, I. (1951). Post-mortem dissection artefacts of the neck and their differentiation from ante-mortem bruises. South African Medical Journal, 25, 358–361.

Kanchan, T., Ritesh, G., Menezes, A., & Manipady, S. (2006). Haemorrhoids leading to post-mortem bleeding artefact. Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine, 13(5), 277–279.

Kumar, Y., Guareschi, E., Bharti, H., Paola, A., & Magni, P. (2023). Haemorrhagic artefacts produced by ant activity on human cadavers in the early post-mortem period. Forensic Sciences, 3, 506–510.

Published

2026-03-28

Issue

Section

Case Report

How to Cite

Postmortem Bleed - An Artefact- A Case Report. (2026). Journal of Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, 43(1), 10-12. https://doi.org/10.48165/jfmt.2026.43.01.02