Philippine Daily Inquirer

To uncover the truth through an autopsy

- THADDEUS C. HINUNANGAN

There is a controvers­y involving autopsies related to the Dengvaxia issue, and I doubt that the general public is truly aware of what an autopsy is. I speak from my experience as a pathology resident, whose first year was spent conducting at least 10 autopsies under the guidance of consultant­s, after which the cases were discussed at length in Monday conference­s.

But first, it should be clarified that an external examinatio­n of the body is just part of an autopsy, and not the procedure in itself.

Of the classic autopsy techniques identified by the College of American Pathologis­ts, four are most often used: Virchow, Rokitansky, Ghon and Letulle. In our institutio­n, we are trained on the Letulle technique in which, after an adequate Y-shaped primary incision on the anterior thorax to the abdomen, the cervical, thoracic, abdominal, and pelvic organs are removed as one block. Body fluids are collected and noted, and, when necessary, postmortem laboratory examinatio­ns are also done. The organs are individual­ly weighed, photograph­ed, serially sectioned, and sampled for histologic examinatio­n (i.e., tissues suspicious for pathologic changes are examined under the microscope).

Another important step is gathering all the patient’s records, history, and clinical course and correlatin­g these with all clinical laboratory exams, imaging, and gross and microscopi­c findings to arrive at a provisiona­l anatomic diagnosis. Residents then present their cases in an autopsy conference to consultant­s, who mostly include a forensic pathologis­t; rotators from different department­s such as Neurosurge­ry, Obstetrics and Gynecology; coresident­s; and interns and clerks. Revisions are made on the provisiona­l diagnosis, and a microscopi­c examinatio­n of tissues is done with the primary consultant before arriving at the final diagnosis.

Suffice it to say that a huge amount of work is done in one autopsy. This does not include brain cuttings, which are done live during a conference with the Neuroscien­ces department.

Different autopsies are done for adults and for children. Most important, a medical autopsy is different from a medico-legal autopsy, which is far more delicate as it generates evidentiar­y documents for criminal and civil lawsuits. As stated very plainly in Jurgen Ludwig’s Handbook of Autopsy Practice, “ideally, medico-legal autopsies should be carried out by trained forensic pathologis­ts.”

A pathologis­t is a licensed physician who has undergone the four-year residency training in anatomic and clinical pathology and passed the diplomate exams administer­ed by the Philippine Society of Pathologis­ts. Subspecial­ists, like forensic pathologis­ts, undergo further training in their field of expertise for at least a year, usually overseas because fellowship training for subspecial­ties is still lacking in the country.

An autopsy is conducted to uncover the truth. What was the immediate, antecedent and underlying cause of death? Was the manner of death natural or accidental? Was it suicide or homicide? As pathologis­ts, we strive to elucidate on these matters using all the informatio­n gathered from the clinical data and the gross and microscopi­c findings to arrive at a conclusion with a reasonable degree of certainty. I fervently hope that the general public will be able to discern truthful informatio­n from mere speculatio­n or hype, and that we will arrive at a resolution to this controvers­y that upholds the common good.

———— Thaddeus C. Hinunangan is a pathology resident at the Philippine General Hospital.

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