Morphologic Markers of Acute and Chronic Stress in Child Abuse

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Abstract

Objectives: To elucidate pathologic markers of acute and chronic stress found but rarely reported in chronic child abuse. Methods: Autopsies of 3 cases of fatal child abuse with well-documented chronic maltreatment are reported, with an emphasis on the nontraumatic findings of acute and chronic stress. Results: Besides the overwhelming physical injuries, all 3 children and 1 additional case obtained for consultation had telogen effluvium, a form of alopecia well known to be associated with stress in adults and some children but never reported in chronic abuse. All 3 had the microscopic findings of markedly involuted thymus, a well-known marker of physiologic stress in children but only occasionally referred to in child abuse. All 3 also had microscopic findings of myocardial necrosis associated with supraphysiologic levels of catecholamine, a well-documented finding associated with stress but rarely reported in fatalities associated with child abuse. Two of the 3 children also had Anitschkow-like nuclear changes in cardiac tissue, markers associated with prior, nonischemic myocardial pathologies that may be associated with prior episodes of acute stress. Conclusions: Pathologists are urged to explore these markers as supportive evidence in their own investigations of possible child abuse fatalities, especially when associated with stress.

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APA

Flomenbaum, M. A., & Warner, R. C. (2022). Morphologic Markers of Acute and Chronic Stress in Child Abuse. American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 157(6), 823–835. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/aqab204

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