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Putrefactive “rigor mortis”

Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology, 2011
Michael Tsokos, Roger W ...
Tsokos, M., Byard, R.
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Studies on rigor mortis

Forensic Science, 1973
Abstract In a physical investigation of the gastrocnemius muscles of rats killed and kept at about 20°C, rigor mortis was complete at 5–6 hours post mortem . This fact was confirmed by electronmicroscopic investigation of the myofibrils of the gastrocnemius muscles of these rats, especially by the A:I band ratios and the diameters of the ...
Sinichiro Ota   +2 more
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Rigor, but not rigor mortis, in depression research.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1995
With reference to the depression research methods review of H. Tennen, J.A. Hall, and G. Affleck (1995) and the earlier recommendations of P. C. Kendall, S. D. Hollon, A. T. Beck, C. L. Hammen, and R. E. Ingram (1987), the present discussion considers and then reaffirms selected methods.
Ellen Flannery-Schroeder   +1 more
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“Rigor Mortis” in a Live Patient [PDF]

open access: possibleAmerican Journal of Forensic Medicine & Pathology, 2010
Rigor mortis is conventionally a postmortem change. Its occurrence suggests that death has occurred at least a few hours ago. The authors report a case of "Rigor Mortis" in a live patient after cardiac surgery. The likely factors that may have predisposed such premortem muscle stiffening in the reported patient are, intense low cardiac output status ...
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Cardiac rigor mortis in dogs

Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1979
Abstract Experiments designed to ascertain the relationship between cardiac rigor and myocardial ATP depletion were performed in excised totally ischemic dog hearts incubated in vitro at 37°C. Spontaneous electrical activity was recorded and left ventricular contractile response and pressure were measured with an intracavitary balloon.
Keith A. Reimer   +2 more
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Revolution, Rigor, and Rigor Mortis

The Mathematics Teacher, 1967
When I first heard the recent changes in mathematics education described as a Revolution, my feeling was that the word was too harsh and implied too much violence I preferred to omit the “R.” Perhaps this is because the word “Revolution” always brings to mind the French Revolution and Charles Dickens’ Tale of Two Cities in which, for some reason, I ...
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All Mortis, No Rigor

International Security, 1999
Like Caesar’s view of Gaul, Stephen Walt’s evaluation of the recent rational choice literature in strategic studies is divided into three parts.1 But all the king’s horses and all the king’s men could not put his article back together again: the analysis of the second section does not follow from the arst, and the conclusions of the third cannot be ...
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Experimental evaluation of rigor mortis

Forensic Science International, 2008
Objective measurements were carried out to study the possible re-establishment of rigor mortis on rats after "breaking" (mechanical solution). Our experiments showed that: *Cadaveric rigidity can re-establish after breaking. *A significant rigidity can reappear if the breaking occurs before the process is complete. *Rigidity will be considerably weaker
Krompecher, Thomas   +3 more
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Mossy cells in epilepsy: rigor mortis or vigor mortis?

Trends in Neurosciences, 2002
Mossy cells are bi-directionally connected through a positive feedback loop to granule cells, the principal cells of the dentate gyrus. This recurrent circuit is strategically placed between the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampal CA3 region. In spite of their potentially pro-convulsive arrangement with granule cells, mossy cells have not been ...
Ivan Soltesz   +3 more
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