C
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 angiography using femoral cannulation and postmortem microbiology.
TL;DR: Preliminary results suggest that postmortem angiography using a femoral approach does not constitute an impediment to the collection of peripheral blood for microbiology and vice versa, and the use of femoral blood for microbiomeology does not lead to an increased risk of doubtful results.
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A serum metabolomics signature of hypothermia fatalities involving arginase activity, tryptophan content, and phosphatidylcholine saturation
Guillaume Rousseau,Juan Manuel Chao de la Barca,Clotilde Rougé-Maillart,Grzegorz Teresiński,Nathalie Jousset,Xavier Dieu,Floris Chabrun,Delphine Prunier-Mirabeau,Gilles Simard,Pascal Reynier,Cristian Palmiere +10 more
TL;DR: The serum metabolic signature of hypothermia fatalities herein observed pointed toward metabolic adaptations that likely aimed at heat production enhancement, endothelial function, and cell membrane fluidity preservation.
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Combining Postmortem Vitreous Sodium and Chloride and Lung-Body Ratio in Aiding the Diagnosing Saltwater Drowning.
Rexson Tse,Jack Garland,Kilak Kesha,Paul Morrow,Leo Lam,Hannah Elstub,Allan Cala,Amy Spark,Cristian Palmiere,Simon Stables +9 more
TL;DR: The developed tree models can be a reliable way in aiding the diagnosis of SWD1 after adjusting for interlaboratory variations, and revealed that combination of PMVSC and LB ratio was most accurate in diagnosingSWD1.
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Postmortem Tryptase Level in 120 Consecutive Nonanaphylactic Deaths: Establishing a Reference Range as <23 μg/L.
Jack Garland,Winston Philcox,Sinead McCarthy,Suneeth Mathew,Sarah Hensby-Bennett,Benjamin Ondrushka,Lina Woydt,Ugo Da Broi,Cristian Palmiere,Leo Lam,Yeri Ahn,Kelly Olds,Charley Glenn,Paul Morrow,Kilak Kesha,Simon Stables,Rexson Tse,Rexson Tse +17 more
TL;DR: This study sampled 120 consecutive nonanaphylactic deaths in which all the peripheral bloods were sampled as recommended and the postmortem tryptase reference range was established as <23 μg/L (97.5th percentile).