Deaths occurring during the
fire.
Death may be due to the effects of breathing the products of fire/
burning, principally carbon monoxide, but also cyanide and many other toxic
by-products of combustion. Alternatively, death may be due to the effects of
heat (i.e. heat shock), or the inhalation of hot air/ gases, possibly related
to the initiation of a vagally-mediated ‘reflex’ cardiac arrest following the
stimulation of nerve endings in the pharynx/larynx.
The effects of heat and smoke/ fumes are usually more rapid (in a house
fire) than the effects of direct injury from flames; an assessment of the body
surface area affected by burns (using the clinical ‘rule of nines’ method)
should, however, still be performed. It is often difficult to determine what
represents ante mortem vs. post mortem burning; reddening of the edges of the
burns may point to an ante mortem aetiology, but this is not conclusive.
The significance of trauma may be equally difficult to determine –
perimortem injuries can not be effectively ‘aged’, and it may therefore be
impossible to state with any confidence whether injuries resulted from ante
mortem trauma (and therefore may be relevant to the cause of death) or were
caused post mortem.
Deaths occurring after a
fire.
A review of fire-related deaths in
- The effects
of burns – fluid loss, electrolyte imbalance, hypovolaemic shock. A rough
‘rule of thumb’ is that prognosis is poor if the sum of the % body surface
area burned and the age is greater than 100.
- Infection
(reduced ‘barrier protection’ of burned skin)
- Adult
respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
- Renal failure
- Abnormal
clotting
