The present invention is within the field of forensic medicine. More particularly, the present invention relates to improvements for determining time of death in forensic medicine. It is well known that determination of time of death can be crucially important in death scene investigations. The coroner or medical examiner, in accurately determining time of death, often plays a major role in ruling in or out certain homicide suspects, and even determining manner of death (accident, suicide or homicide, for example). Unfortunately, the current state of the art in determining time of death is such that estimates can vary widely, depending upon the skill and experience of the medical examiner, and the relatively subjective evaluation of such things as degree of rigor mortis, lividity, stomach contents, etc. Even in the best of hands, an estimated time of death range is usually no better than plus or minus several hours, especially when no reliable witnesses are available. What is greatly needed in this field is a scientific device, which provides a multitude of objective data points, so that much greater accuracy can be obtained in determining time of death, especially in cases where death was apparently recent (within the previous 24 hours) and without any witnesses. It is also an object of the present invention to provide for a device that can be used at the death scene investigation so that a rapid determination of “working time of death” can be provided to homicide detectives and other investigators, before the autopsy can be conducted, in order to expedite their work.
The present invention is a time of death probe and recorder, known hereafter as “TDPR.”
Before describing the details of this invention, it is first useful to briefly review the scientific principle upon which the invention is based. In 1701 Sir Isaac Newton defined the Law of Cooling, which is quoted by Clifford Pickover's book entitled “Archimedes to Hawking—Laws of Science and the Great Minds Behind Them” (Oxford University Press, 2008, page 104):
The TDPR of the present invention makes use of Newton's Law of Cooling and provides a solution to the non-uniformity of body temperature issue raised by the preceding paragraph, by focusing on time dependent changes in core body temperature. It is well known that the skin temperature of a human body can vary widely from one location on the body to another, simply by differences in the body's immediate environment (ambient heat and light exposure, temperature conducting surfaces, different articles of clothing, etc.) and body position relative to these environmental variables. However, it is also well known that core body temperature shows little variation from one core body site (liver, heart, brain, middle ear, etc.) to another while the core body temperature gradually (over an extended period of time) moves towards equilibration with the surrounding environmental temperature.
The present invention continually or intermittently measures and records core body temperature and time. This information can be plotted on a graph and the time of death (“time zero”) may be accurately extrapolated using the above equation from Newton's Law of Cooling, or a modern facsimile thermodynamic equation. Naturally, the degree of accuracy will also be improved by the greater the temperature difference between the core body temperature and the environmental temperature ([T0−Tenv] in the Law of Cooling equation above). Note that To is “initial measured temperature of object” and not the same as T(0), “the temperature of the object at time zero” in the Law of Cooling equation. Obviously, once the core body temperature has completely equilibrated with the environmental temperature, the TDPR of the present invention would not be useful. However, in the common situations where there is a significant temperature difference between the core body temperature and the environmental temperature, and where it can also be assumed that the environmental temperature conditions have not significantly changed since the time of death, the TDPR of the present invention can be extremely helpful in accurately determining time of death. The accuracy of this extrapolation is at a premium if one can also assume that the deceased had a normal body temperature (98.6° F. plus or minus a few tenths of a degree) at the time of death, but is still high for situations in which the deceased was only mildly febrile or mildly hypothermic at the time of death.
Once multiple core body temperature and time measurements are recorded by the TDPR over a sufficient time interval, this information is communicated to, and analyzed by a software application on any number of digital computer system devices, such as smart phones, tablets, laptops, desktops, servers, etc.). Various embodiments of this present invention incorporate such means of digital computer system device communication.
The TDPR of the present invention is comprised generally of a core body thermometer probe; a means to record temperature data from probe; a timing mechanism; a means to record time data from timing mechanism; a means to correlate recorded time and temperature data; a non-volatile memory unit to store correlated time and temperature data; and a power source.
The present invention may further comprise a wireless device to transmit correlated time and temperature data to any digital computer system device, such as a smart phone, tablet, laptop, desktop, server, etc.
The present invention may have a display unit to indicate the status of the device. The present invention may further comprise a software application wherein the software application analyzes the correlated time and temperature data using a thermodynamic equation that extrapolates the time of death.
The means to record temperature data from probe may be comprised of a microprocessor to record digital or analog electronic signals from the probe. The timing mechanism may be a digital or analog real-time clock. The means to record time data from timing mechanism may be comprised of a microprocessor to record digital or analog electronic signals from the timing mechanism. The non-volatile memory may be a microprocessor, a flash drive, secure digital card, or other similarly removable memory card or disk or combinations thereof. The power source may be a battery, an electrical outlet with voltage regulation or combinations thereof. Preferably, the core body thermometer probe is comprised of at least one infrared sensor.
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As an optional accessory electronic element, a wireless transceiver may also be included, and controlled by the microprocessor, for streaming data during or after the recording phase. The present invention also includes a software application which analyzes the recorded temperature/time data using the above equation for Newton's Law of Cooling, or a modern facsimile thermodynamic equation, to extrapolate the time of death (“time zero”). For example, the thermodynamic equation T(t)=Tenv+[T0−Tenv]e−kt, may be used, where T is temperature, t is time, Tenv is the temperature of the environment, T0 is the initial measured temperature of the biological organism, and k is a positive constant, and wherein said equation is used to extrapolate the time (“time zero”) when the organism was last at its normal core body temperature, defined as T(0).
Although any temperature probe 30 which can be inserted within the body to record core body temperature can be considered within the scope of the present invention, the best use embodiment of the TDPR core body thermometer is believed to be an infrared (IR) ear canal thermometer. Such devices already have the capability to quickly, easily, and accurately measure core body temperature. For instance, in pediatric medicine, small, non-invasive IR ear thermometers are used to measure the temperature of the tympanic membrane (“ear drum”). Infrared sensors record temperature and convert the temperature to an analog signal.
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The microprocessor 50 records electronic signals (in either digital or analog form) from the above thermometer probe 30 and real-time clock 60 in non-volatile memory 10. An excellent example of such a memory device in current use is a SD card. A flash drive is another excellent example. A small coin battery is used as the power supply, such as a battery used in watches. However, it is contemplated that an electrical outlet and power cord may also be used. A push button 80 is used to start and stop the recording of the TDPR. A LED display shown as 90 and 100 together is used to indicate the status of the device.
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A software application analyzes the time and temperature data to create a graph displaying the change in core body temperature of the deceased as a function of time. The program utilizes Newton's Law of Cooling equation given above, or a modern facsimile thermodynamic equation, to extrapolate the temperature/time graph back to time zero, which is operationally defined as the point where the temperature/time graph intersects the temperature ordinate axis at 98.6° F. or 36.9° C. Statistical error bars are also plotted on the graph according to accepted rules of statistical analysis.
The following is a brief description of the best use of the preferred embodiment of this invention in the field of forensic medicine. Turning to
Depending upon which embodiment of this invention is used, the data is either streamed to a digital computer system device for real-time analysis during the recording session or analyzed soon thereafter from non-volatile memory. The data is analyzed by software application installed on a smart phone, tablet, laptop or other portable digital computer either at the crime scene or back at the forensic laboratory. In this way, a “working time of death” can be determined at the end of the recording session, pending collection of all other forensic evidence for the coroner to establish an “official time of death.” This information can be of great use to homicide detectives in the field immediately after the data recording session, as opposed to waiting for the preliminary autopsy results, which may come a day or more later.
For the purposes of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference has been made to the preferred embodiments illustrated in the drawings, and specific language has been used to describe these embodiments. However, this specific language intends no limitation of the scope of the invention, and the invention should be construed to encompass all embodiments that would normally occur to one of ordinary skill in the art. The particular implementations shown and described herein are illustrative examples of the invention and are not intended to otherwise limit the scope of the invention in any way. For the sake of brevity, conventional aspects of the system (and components of the individual operating components of the system) may not be described in detail. Furthermore, the connecting lines, or connectors shown in the various figures presented are intended to represent exemplary functional relationships and/or physical or logical couplings between the various elements. It should be noted that many alternative or additional functional relationships, physical connections or logical connections may be present in a practical device. Moreover, no item or component is essential to the practice of the invention unless the element is specifically described as “essential” or “critical”. Numerous modifications and adaptations will be readily apparent to those skilled in this art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/875,616 filed Sep. 9, 2013. The entire contents of the above application are hereby incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61875611 | Sep 2013 | US |