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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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Updated review of postmortem biochemical exploration of hypothermia with a presentation of standard strategy of sampling and analyses

TL;DR: This work presents an updated review with novel biomarkers (such as catecholamines O-methylated metabolites, thrombomodulin and the cardiac oxyhemoglobin ratio) as well as some propositional interpretative postmortem thresholds and, for the first time, presents the most adapted strategy of sampling and analyses to identify biomarkers of hypothermia.
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Cardiovascular Involvement in Sepsis.

TL;DR: The authors highlight that a complete methodological approach, integrating clinical data by means of autopsy and histological and laboratory findings aiming to identify and demonstrate the host response to infectious insult, is mandatory, and is likely to produce an accurate objective surveillance of deaths due to sepsis.
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Hypothermia provokes hemorrhaging in various core muscle groups: how many of them could we have missed?

TL;DR: The results of the study reaffirm the potential of the careful core muscle dissection for the clarification of hypothermic deaths and offer an attractive diagnostic opportunity in Centers lacking high-end imaging technologies and molecular postmortem programs.
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Malignant metastasizing solitary fibrous tumors of the liver: a report of three cases.

TL;DR: A case series of three malignant solitary fibrous tumors of the liver, occurring in two women 74 and 80 years old and one 65-year-old man, revealed the presence of high pleomorphic cellularity with nuclear atypia, necrosis and high mitotic ratios.
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Differences in sampling techniques on total post-mortem tryptase.

TL;DR: Femoral total post-mortem tryptase is significantly different, albeit by a small amount, between the two sampling methods; the clinical significance of this finding and what factors may contribute to it are unclear.