Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina

The Tomašica grave-site near Prijedor in the north of Bosnia is reported to be the largest primary mass grave discovered thus far relating to the 1992–95 war. A total of 275 complete bodies and 125 body parts were exhumed from it in 2013. Post mortem examinations of the victims showed that nearly al...

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Main Authors: Adis Salihbegović, John Clark, Nermin Sarajlić, Svjetlana Radović, Finlay Finlay, Anes Jogunčić, Emina Spahić, Vedo Tuco
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association of Basic Medical Sciences of Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2018-08-01
Series:Bosnian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.bjbms.org/ojs/index.php/bjbms/article/view/3343
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spelling doaj-b7faac0d76064695bfdd86daf320f9bf2020-11-24T22:02:20ZengAssociation of Basic Medical Sciences of Federation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences1512-86011840-48122018-08-0118310.17305/bjbms.2018.3343890Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and HerzegovinaAdis Salihbegović0John Clark1Nermin Sarajlić2Svjetlana Radović3Finlay Finlay4Anes Jogunčić5Emina Spahić6Vedo Tuco7Department of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaFormerly Department of Forensic Medicine and Science, School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UKDepartment of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaDepartment of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaDepartment of Forensic Medicine and Science, School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UKDepartment of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaDepartment of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and HerzegovinaDepartment of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tuzla, Tuzla, Bosnia and HerzegovinaThe Tomašica grave-site near Prijedor in the north of Bosnia is reported to be the largest primary mass grave discovered thus far relating to the 1992–95 war. A total of 275 complete bodies and 125 body parts were exhumed from it in 2013. Post mortem examinations of the victims showed that nearly all had died from gunshot injuries but an additional striking feature was the degree of preservation of many of the bodies, even 21 years on, with skin, soft tissues and internal organs still present in abundance and gross structures clearly identifiable. Histology was performed on 68 samples of soft tissue from a total 13 bodies, on both skin and internal organs, and the degree of preservation was assessed in terms of the ability to recognize microscopic structure. Further comparison was made with samples taken a month or so later (56 tissue samples from 9 bodies, all but one different from the first group), after the bodies had been covered in salt as a means of general preservation. Generally, at a microscopic level, skin and subcutaneous tissues were better preserved than internal organs, while tissues sampled at the time of autopsy were better preserved than those sampled weeks later.http://www.bjbms.org/ojs/index.php/bjbms/article/view/3343Tomašica mass graveadipocerehistopathology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adis Salihbegović
John Clark
Nermin Sarajlić
Svjetlana Radović
Finlay Finlay
Anes Jogunčić
Emina Spahić
Vedo Tuco
spellingShingle Adis Salihbegović
John Clark
Nermin Sarajlić
Svjetlana Radović
Finlay Finlay
Anes Jogunčić
Emina Spahić
Vedo Tuco
Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences
Tomašica mass grave
adipocere
histopathology
author_facet Adis Salihbegović
John Clark
Nermin Sarajlić
Svjetlana Radović
Finlay Finlay
Anes Jogunčić
Emina Spahić
Vedo Tuco
author_sort Adis Salihbegović
title Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
title_short Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
title_full Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
title_fullStr Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
title_full_unstemmed Histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the Tomašica grave-site in Bosnia and Herzegovina
title_sort histological observations on adipocere in human remains buried for 21 years at the tomašica grave-site in bosnia and herzegovina
publisher Association of Basic Medical Sciences of Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
series Bosnian Journal of Basic Medical Sciences
issn 1512-8601
1840-4812
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The Tomašica grave-site near Prijedor in the north of Bosnia is reported to be the largest primary mass grave discovered thus far relating to the 1992–95 war. A total of 275 complete bodies and 125 body parts were exhumed from it in 2013. Post mortem examinations of the victims showed that nearly all had died from gunshot injuries but an additional striking feature was the degree of preservation of many of the bodies, even 21 years on, with skin, soft tissues and internal organs still present in abundance and gross structures clearly identifiable. Histology was performed on 68 samples of soft tissue from a total 13 bodies, on both skin and internal organs, and the degree of preservation was assessed in terms of the ability to recognize microscopic structure. Further comparison was made with samples taken a month or so later (56 tissue samples from 9 bodies, all but one different from the first group), after the bodies had been covered in salt as a means of general preservation. Generally, at a microscopic level, skin and subcutaneous tissues were better preserved than internal organs, while tissues sampled at the time of autopsy were better preserved than those sampled weeks later.
topic Tomašica mass grave
adipocere
histopathology
url http://www.bjbms.org/ojs/index.php/bjbms/article/view/3343
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