Virtual Autopsy: Virtopsy

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Though it is an unpleasant thought for an average person to consider, but an autopsy is an essential part of the investigative process. An autopsy is defined as an examination of a body after death to determine the cause of death or the character and extent of changes produced by disease (Merriam-Webster Dictionary). It is often used as means to gather evidence, access trauma to bodies, and or diagnose diseases or pathology to a deceased person. It is often used in conjunction with police investigation in the quest for justice in the court system. This, sometimes, involves cutting into the body to retrieve evidence or determine the cause of death. Many times, this isn’t a feasible option, either for religious reasons or family wishes. However, the how and why of the death still has to be ascertained. A valuable tool that many death investigators use is radiographs. It is non-invasive, and allows the examiner to have a preliminary place to start. A new innovation in this mode of inquiry is called a Virtual Autopsy or “Virtopsy”.

It was developed by Richard Dirnhofer, the former head of the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Bern, Switzerland. He was combing over a case that involved the injuries to the skull of a murder victim. His subsequent developments steered the way for a Swiss team, led by Professor Michael Thali of the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Zurich, to begin using x-ray imaging to create scalpel-free 3D images of intact cadavers (Honigsbaum).

Some of the equipment that comprises the system of vitropsy are on the cutting edge of technology. This includes a robot-guided surface scanning for 3D records of the surface of the body in terms of scale and color. This is in addition to the visual examination done by...

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