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Laurent Martrille

Researcher at University of Lorraine

Publications -  20
Citations -  210

Laurent Martrille is an academic researcher from University of Lorraine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 20 publications receiving 132 citations. Previous affiliations of Laurent Martrille include American Board of Legal Medicine.

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Skin wounds vitality markers in forensic pathology: An updated review.

TL;DR: Wound age evaluation is one of the most challenging issues in forensic pathology and optimal sensitivity and specificity values could probably be reached by combining several markers, validated by large groups of pre- and post-mortem wounds.
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FVIIIra, CD15, and tryptase performance in the diagnosis of skin stab wound vitality in forensic pathology

TL;DR: CD15 and tryptase, but not FVIIIra, may be useful markers for differentiating recent antemortem from postmortem injuries, but these markers were not reliable in putrefied or desiccated specimens.
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Technical note: The two step procedure (TSP) for the determination of age at death of adult human remains in forensic cases.

TL;DR: After 15 years of use, a literature review and four evaluation studies it is confirmed that TSP is more accurate than any single method for aging adults and at least as good as more complicated combined methods.
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Synergistic Role of Newer Techniques for Forensic and Postmortem CT Examinations.

TL;DR: An overview of newer techniques and postprocessing tools that improve the potential impact of CT in forensic situations and has become a standard tool in medicolegal practice.
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The markers of wound vitality in forensic pathology

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the literature on wound vitality using immunohistochemistry is presented, which seems to be the more valuable method, given its easiness to perform and the possibility to analyze the localization of the molecules of interest.