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      The mummified corpse in a domestic setting.

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          Abstract

          A mummified body of an 86-year-old white man with a history of coronary atherosclerosis was found in the reception-room of his apartment located in a condominium of the city-center of Bari (Southern Italy) approximately 7 years after disappearance. Unpaid electricity bills caused the power stations to turn off electricity while unpaid condominium bills forced the manager of the condominium to open the apartment where the body was found. The corpse was well preserved through the mummification process and no external injuries were observed. Signs of a very low insect activity were also present, reasonably consistent with a rapid skin dehydration. The body was sitting on the carpet in front of an easy-chair, fully clothed by a woollen vest with dark paints and shoes. The head was lying face down on the easy-chair. The corpse was very light in weight, fixed in the sitting position by the brittle dehydrated tissues. The carpet on which the body was sitting and the covering tissue of the easy-chair on which the head was lying absorbed most of the early putrefactive fluids coming from the corpse. The internal organs were grossly identifiable but essentially unremarkable. On histologic examination most of the tissues were found to be autolyzed. Toxicology studies revealed only decompositional products. The cause of death was undetermined but presumed natural. Based on the ante-mortem data available the corpse was soon identified by dental comparison to be that one of the apartment owner missing 7 years before. The delayed recovery of elderly people who lived alone, incapacitated or unable to get help, or even of lonely deaths of nobody seems to miss are often explained by the isolation os such people even in urban areas in addition to a deficient family support, missing social and neighborly relationships, worsening of the health and financial conditions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Forensic Med Pathol
          The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          1533-404X
          0195-7910
          Sep 2009
          : 30
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Health Sciences, University of Molise, Campobasso, Italy. cpcarlo@yahoo.com
          Article
          00000433-200909000-00024
          10.1097/PAF.0b013e318187df4b
          19696596
          280f45e9-254d-4813-95e8-7b5d014f0ac6
          History

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