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Cristian Palmiere

Researcher at University of Lausanne

Publications -  145
Citations -  2364

Cristian Palmiere is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Postmortem Diagnosis & Postmortem Changes. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 145 publications receiving 2013 citations. Previous affiliations of Cristian Palmiere include University Hospital of Lausanne & American Board of Legal Medicine.

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Postmortem findings in bone cement implantation syndrome-related deaths.

TL;DR: Cardiac comorbidities can also significantly influence the severity of intraoperative complications, thus corroborating the hypothesis of a multifactorial model in the pathogenesis of bone cement implantation syndrome.
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Postmortem computed tomography angiography, contrast medium administration and toxicological analyses in urine.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that toxicology might be effectively performed, in very special cases and for a large number of molecules, in biological samples collected after angiography, it remains recommendable to collect biological fluids for toxicology prior to contrast medium injection.
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Fatal metformin overdose: case report and postmortem biochemistry contribution.

TL;DR: An autopsy case involving a 70-year-old woman suffering from diabetes mellitus and impaired renal function who received metformin treatment is described, highlighting the usefulness of performing exhaustive toxicology and postmortem biochemistry towards the more complete understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms that may be involved in the death process.
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Diagnosis of myocardial ischemia combining multiphase postmortem CT-angiography, histology, and postmortem biochemistry.

TL;DR: The preliminary results seem to indicate that the identification of a pathological enhancement of the myocardium at postmortem angiography is associated with the presence of increased levels of cardiac troponins in postmortem serum and morphological findings of ischemia.
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Diagnostic performance of urinary metanephrines for the postmortem diagnosis of hypothermia

TL;DR: Urinary catecholamines, metanephrine and adrenaline had the best discriminative value between hypothermia and control cases compared to other tested analytes, though with different sensitivity and specificity, and can be considered the most suitable markers of cold-related stress.