Title: FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY
1FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY
prepared and presented by shabeel pn
2- FORENSIC IS DERIVED FROM THE LATIN WORD FORUM
WHICH MEANS COURT OF LAW - ODONTOLOGY?STUDY OF TEETH
- DEFINED AS THAT BRANCH OF DENTISTRY WHICH ,IN THE
INTEREST OF JUSTICE ,DEALS WITH THE PROPER
HANDLING AND EXAMINATION OF DENTAL EVIDENCE,AND
WITH THE PROPER EVALUATION AND PRESENTATION OF
DENTAL FINDINGS
3- FORENSIC DENTISTRY PLAYS A MAJOR ROLE IN
IDENTIFICATION IN MAN MADE OR NATURAL DISASTER
EVENTS THAT RESULT IN MULTIPLE FATALITIES THAT
MAY NOT BE IDENTIFIABLE THROUGH CONVENTIONAL
METHODS SUCH AS FINGER PRINTS
4- THE EARLIEST KNOWN EXAMPLE BY DENTAL MEANS DATES
BACK TO 66 AD - ELABORATE DENTAL RECORDS INCLUDING RADIOGRAPHS
AND SPARE CROWNS IDENTIFIED THE BODY OF ADOLPH
HITLER ,THE MOST HIGH PROFILE CASE OF DENTAL
IDENTIFICATION - IT RELIES ON SOUND KNOWLEDGE OF TEETH AND JAWS
,POSSESED BY DENTIST AND INCORPORATES DENTAL
ANATOMY ,HISTOLOGY RADIOGRAPHY ,DENTAL MATERIALS
AND DEVELOPMENTAL ANOMALIES
5- FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY DELVE INTO
- IDENTIFYING UNKNOWN HUMAN REMAINS THROUGH DENTAL
RECORDS ,AND ASSISTING AT LOCATION OF MASS
DISASTER - ELICITING THE ETHNICITY AND ASSISTING IN BUILDING
UP A PICTURE OF LIFESTYLE AND DIET OF SKELETAL
REMAINS AT ARCHEOLOGICAL SITES - DETERMINIG THE GENDER OF AN UNIDENTIFIED
INDIVIDUAL - AGE ESTIMATION OF BOTH THE LIVING AND DECEASED
- RECOGNITION AND ANALYSIS OF BITE MARKS FOUND ON
VICTIMS OF ATTACK AND OTHER SUBSTANCES SUCH AS
FOOD STUFF - 6. PRESENTING EVIDENCE IN COURT AS AN EXPERT
WITNESS
6PERSONAL IDENTIFICATION
- IDENTIFICATION IS THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A PERSONS
INDIVIDUALITY - REQUIRED FOR LEGAL AND HUMANITARIAN REASONS
- HELP IN SETTLEMENT OF PROPERTY ,FACLITATE
REMARRIAGE OF A SURVIVING SPOUSE AND ALLOW
CREMATION OR BURIAL OF THE BODY ,ACCORDING TO
RELAVENT RELIGIOUS AND CULTURAL CUSTOMS
7- TRADITIONAL METHODS
- VISUALLY RECOGNISING BODY
- PERSONAL PROPERTY SUCH AS CLOTHING ,JEWELLERY ETC
- VISUALLY IDENTIFYING THAT IS BURNT OR DECOMPODSED
CAN BE AVERY TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE FOR RELATIVES
AND FRIENDS ,THE BETTER OPTION IDENTIFICATION IS
FORENSIC EXPERT TO ANALYSE PHYSICAL FEATURES
PRESENT IN THE BODY
8- PHYSICAL FEATURES ARE PRONE TO CHANGE OVER TIME
,FINGER PRINTS ARE EXCEPTIONS BUT LIKE OTHER SOFT
TISSUE,UNDERGO POST MORTUM CHANGE - BEING THE STRONGEST STRUCTURE PRESENT IN THE BODY
DENTAL HARD TISSUES ARE RESISTANT TO POST MORTUM
DECOMPOSITION
9- MOREOVER MOST MATERIAL USED BY DENTIST FOR
RESTORING TEETH ARE ALSO RESISTANT TO POST MORTUM
DESTRUCTION - THEREFORE THE USE OF DENTAL EVIDENCE IS THE
METHOD OF CHOICE IN ESTABLISHING THE IDENTITY OF
BADLY BURNT ,TRAUMATISED,DECOMPOSED AND
SKELETONISED REMAINS
10BASIS FOR DENTAL IDENTIFICATION
- HUMAN DENTITION IS NEVER SAME IN ANY TWO
INDIVIDUALS - THE ,MORPHLOGY AND ARRANGEMENT OF TEETH VARY FROM
PERSON TO PERSON - TEETH ARE RELATIVELY RESISTANTNTO ENVIRONMENTAL
INSULTS AFTER DEATH
11DENTAL IDENTIFICATION PROCEDURES
- TWO FORMS
- 1. COMPARITIVE IDENTIFICATIONCOMPARING THE DEAD
INDIVIDUALS TEETH WITH PRESUMED DENTAL RECORDS OF
THE INDIVIDUAL - 2. RECONSTRUCTIVE IDENTIFICATION (DENTAL
PROFILING)ATTEMPTS TO ELICIT THE ETHNICITY OR
RACE ,GENDER , AGE AND OCCUPATION OF THE DEAD
INDIVIDUAL.UNDERTAKEN WHEN VIRTUALLY NO CLUE
EXISTS
12COMPARITIVE DENTAL IDENTIFICATION
- INCLUDES FOUR STEPS
- STEP 1ORAL AUTOPSY
- STEP 2OBTAINING DENTAL RECORDS
- STEP 3COMPARING POST MORTUM AND ANTIMORTUM
DENTAL DATA - STEP 4WRITTIN A REPORT AND DRAWING CONCLUSION
13ORAL AUTOPSY
- ALSO KNOWN AS NECROPSY OR POST MORTUM
- IT HAS A SYSTEMATIC PROTOCOL STARTING WITH
CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF THE EXTERNAL FEATURES OF
THE BODY SUCH AS GENDER, ETHNICITY ,BUILT,
WOUNDS.SCARS ,TATTOOS AND BODY PIERCING. - PHOTOGRAPHS, RADIOGRAPHS,FINGERPRINTS,FINGER NAIL
SCRAPING AND HAIR SAMPLE MAY BE OBTAINED
ACCORDING TO THE REQUIREMENTS
14- ORAL EXAMINATION IS AN ESSENTIAL PART OF
POSTMORTUM PROCEDURS - A FORENSIC DENTIST WHO CONDUCT ORAL AUTOPSY
SHOULD HAVE ADEQUATE KNOWLEDGE ABOUT COMMON
POSTMORTUM FINDINGS SUCH AS RIGOR MORTIS ,LIVER
MORTIS ,DECOMPOSITION AND POSTMOTUM ARTEFACTS - RIGOR MORTIS MAY RENDER THE JAW AND THE USE OF
MOUTH GAGS OR INTRA ORAL MYOTOMY IS ESSENTIAL FOR
JAW SEPERATION
15- Since teeth may be brittle in burned cases, they
need to be reinforced with cyanoacrylate cements,
polyvinyl acetate or clear acrylic spray prior to
examination - Access for radiology in incinerated bodies can be
obtained by removing tongue and contents of floor
of mouth in a tunneling fashion from beneath
the skin - The status of each tooth whether intact carious
restored or missing should be carefully noted - A thorough examination of soft tissue injuries,
fracture and presence of foreign bodies is under
taken and samples of hard and soft tissues may be
obtained for further investigation - All information pertaining to the body must be
entered on to standard interpol post-mortem
form, which is color-coded in pink
16- OBTAINING DENTAL RECORDS
- FROM TREATING DENTIST,SPEACILIST,HOSPITAL RECORDS
IN THE FORM OF DENTAL CHARTS RADIOGRAPHS,CASTS,
AND/OR PHOTOGRAPHS - CONTENT OF ALL AVAILABLE RECORDS SHOULD BE
TRANSCRIBED ON TO THE STANDARD INTERPOL
ANTEMRTEM FORM WHICH IS COLOUR CODED IN YELLOW
17- COMPARNG POST-MORTEM ANTE-MORTEM DENTAL RECORDS
- FEATURES COMPARED INCLUDE TOOTH MORPHOLOGY AND
ASSOSIATED BONY STRUCTURES, PATHOLOGY AND
RESTORATIONS - AN INDIVIDUAL WITH MULTIPLE DENTAL TREATMENT AND
UNUSUAL FEATURES HAS A BETTER LIKELIHOOD OF BEING
IDENTIFIED THAN SOMEONE WITH NO EXTRAORDINARY
DENTAL CHARECTERISTICS - COMPARISON SHOULD TAKE IN TO ACCOUNT QUALITY
RATHER THAN QUANTITY
18- WRITING A REPORT AND DRAWING CONCLUSION
- CONFIRMS IDENTIFICATIONMATCH EACH OTHER
- PROBABLE IDENTIFICATIONHIGH LEVEL OF CONCORDANCE
BETWEEN THE TWO SETS OF DATA BUT,USUALLY ,WITH NO
RADIOGRAPHIC SUPPORT - POSSIBLE IDENTIFICATIONEXPLAINABLE
IDENTIFICATION BETWEEN THE ANTE AND POST-MORTEM
DATA - INSUFFICIANT INFORMATIONAVAILABLE
ANTIPOS-MORTEM DATA ARE INSUFFFICIANT - EXCLUDES IDENTIFICATIONANTIPOST MORTEM DATA ARE
CLEARLY INCONSISTENT
19IDENTIFICATION IN DISASTERS
- INVOLVES COMPARING HUNDREDS OR THOUSANDS ,OF ANTE
POST MORTEM DATA - HUMAINS REMAINS IN SUCH EVENTS MAY BE HIGHLY
FRAGMENTED , ONLY PART OF BODY MAY BE RECOVERED
THE NODIES MAY BE INCINERATED OR COMMINGLED i.e.
PARTS OF TWO BODIES MAY BE MIXED -
20- DENTAL SECTION
- FORENSIC DENTIST ARE USUALLY PART OF A TEAM OF
IDENTIFICATION SPECIALIST - THREE SUB SECTIONS
- 1.POST MORTEM UNITS
- 2.ANTE MORTEM UNITS
- 3.DENTAL COMPARISON IDENTIFICATION UNITS
21- POST-MOTEM UNIT
- THE LOCATION AT WHICH A BODY IS RECOVERED NOTED
AND PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION OF MOUTH IS MADE TO
EVALUATE THE ORAL CONDITION - DEFINITIVE EXAMINATION AT MORTURY OF POST-MORTUM
UNIT - A PORTABLE DENTAL RDIGRAPHY SHOULD BE INSTALLED,
TAKING PRECAUTIONS AGAINST RADIATION HAZARDS - RESPONSIBLE FOR PROCESSING RADIOGRAPHS MAY ALSO
NEED ARRANGE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY OF TEETH - TEETH AND JAW SPECIMEN MAY BE REMOVED FROM A BODY
FOR THE CONVEININCE OF EXAMINATION
22- ANTE-MORTEM UNIT
- MOST DIFFICULT.
- THE MEMBERS NEED TO COLLECT AS MUCH AS
INFORMATION AS POSSIBLE IN THE SHORTEST PERIOD OF
TIME - BEGINS WITH LOCATING THE DENTAL RECORDS OF THE
VICTIMS ?COMMUNICATING WITH POLICE, DENTIST, AND
RELATIVES OF THE VICTIMS - ALL INFORMATION OBTAINED MUST BE TRANSFERRED ONTO
THE STANDARD INTERPOL ANTE-MORTEM FORM - THIS CONSTITUTE THE ANTE MORTEM COMPOSITE CHART
23- DENTAL COMPARISON AND IDENTIFICATION UNIT
- COMPARISON AND CONFORMATION OF IDENTIFICATION
- THE ANTE-MORTEM DATA ARE TAKEN INDIVIDUALLY AND
COMPARED TO THE POST-MORTEM DATA THAT ARE SPREAD
OUT (COMPUTER SOFTWARE DEVELOPED TO SIMPLIFY
COMPARISON ) - FINAL IDENTIFICATION SHOULD ALWAYS BE DONE BY
DENTIST MANUALLY
24IDENTIFICATION FROM DENTAL DNA
- TEETH ARE EXCELLENT OURCE OF DNA SINCE IT CAN
RESIST EXTREME CONDITION - PCR ALLOWS AMPLIFICATION OF EVEN HIGHL DEGRADED
DNA - MAJOR ADVANTAGE IS THAT IF DECENDENTS ANTE MOTEM
SAMPLE (HAIR FROM HAIR BRUSH, EPITHELIAL CELLS
FROM TOOTH BRUSH OR BIOPSY)IS UNAVAILABLE ,THE
DNA PATTEN MAY BE COMPARED TO A PARENT OR TO A
SIBLING
25- EXTRACTION OF DENTAL DNA
- PULPAL TISSUE BEST SOURCE OF DENTAL DNA
- CRYOGENIC GRINDING FOR EXTRACTING DNA(COOLING THE
WHOLE TOOTH TO EXTREMLY LOW TEMPERATURE,AND THEN
MECANICALLY GRINDING IT TO FINE POWDER)?TOOTH
WILL BE COMPLETELY CRUSHED - ANOTHER METHOD?DRILLING OF THE ROOT CANALS,
SCRAPING THE PULPAL AREA WITH A NOTCHABLE MEDICAL
NEEDLE,AND SUBSEQUENT FLUSHING OF THE TIISSUE
DEBRIS
26- TYPES OF DNA
- TWO TYPES OF DNA
- 1)GENOMIC OR NUCKEAR DNA
- 2)MITOCHONDRIAL DNA (mtDNA)
- EACH CELL HAS A HIGH COPY OF mt DNA ,ALSO
EXCLUSIVELY INHERITED FROM MOTHERNO CONTRIBUTION
FROM FATHER - THUS IDENTICAL mtDNA IS OBSERVED IN SIBLINGS,
THEIR MOTHER AND MANY MATERNAL RELATIVES
27THE PALATAL RUAE IN IDENTIFICATION
- USEFUL IN EDENTULOUS PERSONS
- RGAE PATTERNS LIKE TEETH ARE CONSIDERED UNIQUE TO
AN INDIVIDUAL - RUGAE PATTERNS ON THE DECEDENTS MAXILLA OR
MAXILLARY DENTURES MAY BE COMPARED TO OLD
DENTURES THAT MAY BE REOVERED FROM THE DECEDENTS
RESIDENCE,OR PLASTER MODEL FROM DENTAL OFFICE
28- CLASSIFICATION OF PALATAL RUGAE
- LYSELL MEASURED RUGAE IN ASTRAIGHT LINE FROM
MEDIAL TO LATERAL AND CATEGORIZED AS - -PRIMARY RUGAE (gt5mm)
- -SECONDARY RUGAE(3-5mm)
- -FRAGMANTARY RUGAE (2-3mm)
- (RUGAE lt2mm IS NOT TAKEN IN TO
CONSIDERATION) - THOMAS KOTZE HAVE FURTHER DETAILED VARIOUS
PATTERNS OF PRIMARY RUGAE BRANCHED ,UNIFIED ,
CROSSLINKED , ANNULAR , PAPILLARY
29- ANALYSIS OF RUGAE PATTERNS
- THOMAS AND VAN WYK HAVE MANUALLY TRACED RUGAE
PATTERN ON PHOTOGRAPHS OF PLASTER MODEL - RECENTLY, LIMSON AND JULIAN HAVE DEVELOPED A
COMPUTER SOFT WARE PROGRAM,RUGFP-ID MATCH(SAME
PRINCIPLE OF FINGER PRINTING)
30DENTAL PROFILING
- WHEN ANTE-MORTEM RECORDS ARE NOT AVAILABLE
- INCLUDES A TRIAD OF INFORMATION?ETHNIC ORIGIN ,
GENDER , AGE - INFORMATION FROM THIS PROCESS WILL ENABLE A MORE
FOCUSSED SEARCH FOR ANTE-MORTEM RECORDS
31- IDENTIFY ETHNIC ORIGIN FROM THE TEETH
- HUMAN RACES HAVE BEEN DIVIDED IN TO THREE RACES
CAUCASOID, MANGALOID AND NEGROID - IT IS POSSIBLE TODAY TO IDENTIFY AN INDIVIDUALS
ETHNIC ORIGIN BASED PURELY ON ONES DENTITION
32- GENETIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCE ON TEETH
- DENTAL FEATURES HAVE COMPLEX MODE OF INHERITENCE
AND ARE COMBINATION OF HERIDITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL
FACTORS TO WHICH PERSON IS EXPOSED - SO DIFFERENT POPULATION SHOW CONSIDERABLE
VARIATION - DENTAL FEATURES IN POPULATION DIVIDED IN TO
- 1)METRIC(TOOTH SIZE)
- 2)NON METRIC(TOOTH SHAPE)
- MORE HERITABLEDEPENDABLE
33NON METRIC DENTAL FEATURES
- CROWN FEATURE
- SHOVELLING,DOUBLE SHOVELLING,CAREBELLIS
FEATURE,THREE CUSPED UPPER 2ND MOLAR,CUSP 5,
CUSP 6,CUSP 7, WINGLING,FIVE -CUSPED LOWER SECOND
MOLAR, LOWER MOLAR GROOVE PATTERN,INTERRUPTION
GROOVE, ENAMEL EXTENSION, ODONTOME, LETAREL
INCISOR VARIATION, DISTAL ACCESSORY RIDGE,
PREMOLAR ACCESSORY RIDGE, PREMOLAR ACCESSORY
MARGINAL TUBERCLE, PREMOLAR LINGUAL CUSP, MESIAL
MARGINAL TUBERCLE OF UPPER MOLAR, PARASTYLE,
PROTOSTYLID
34- ROOT FEATRES
- TWO ROOTED UPPER PREMOLAR
- TWO ROOTED UPPER MOLAR
- TWO ROOTED LOWER CANINE
- TOMES ROOT
- THREE ROOTED LOWER MOLAR
- SINGLE ROOTED LOWER MOLAR
- OF THESE NON-METRIC DENTAL
FEATURES SOME HAVE HIGH FREQUENCY IN CERTAIN
POPULATION AND OTHER UNCOMMEN - Eg SOUTH-ASIANS EXHIBIT 4 CUSPED LOWER
SECOND MOLAR BUT FEATURES LIKE WINGLING
,SHOWELLING,Y GROOVE PATTERN TOMES PATTERN
35- SEX DIFFERANTIATION
- SECOND STEP
- CAN BE DETERMINED
- 1)SEXING FROM CRANIOFACIAL MORPHOLOGY AND
DIMENSION - 2)SEX DIFFRENCES IN TOOTH SIZE
- 3)DENTAL INDEX
- 4)SEX DETERMINATION BY DNA ANALYSIS
- 5)SEX DETERMINATION BY DNA ANALYSIS
36- CRANIOFACIAL MORPHOLOGIC INDICATOR OF SEX
- Skull features
37- CRANIAL MEASUREMENT (IN MM)USEFUL IN SEXING
38 39 40Dental Age Estimation
- Final step in dental profiling
- Estimation methods
- 1). Age estimation in prenatal, neonatal and
- early post natal child
- -by use of histologic technique (12 weeks
before it is actually apparent on radiographs) - -by radiograph-non invasive
- -neonatal line indicates a live births
- -by dry weight of mineralized tooth (at six
month IU- 60mg, newborn-0.5g, six month post
natal-1.8g)
41- 2.Age estimation in children and adolescents
- -two events may be used?eruption and tooth
calcification - -various methods
- a). Schowur and Masslers method described 20
chronological stages of tooth development
starting from 4 months IU until 21 years of age.
It is based on histological section which permits
direct comparison with radiographs - b).Demirjans method made use of a foreign
system. Devolopment of Left side seven
mandibular teeth was devided into 8 stages(A-H).
Each tooth assaigned a maturity score and total
maturity score of all teeth is plotted on a
chronologic age conversion table. Separate
maturity score and age conversion table for both
sexes.
42- c). Third molar in age estimation A valuable
- indicator in the age 16-23 years.
but questionable now a days due to great
variation in genesis, position, morphology and
time of formation. - 3). Age estimation in adults
- challenging when compared to young age groups as
numerous endogenous and exogenous fqactors, such
as disease, nutrition, physical strain
influences. - a). Methods
- Gustafsons method based on morphological and
histological changes of the teeth. Accessed
regressive changes such as - .amount of occlusal attrition (A)
- .coronal secondary dentin deposition(S)
- .loss of periodontal attachment(P)
- .Cementum aposition at the root apex(C)
- .Root resorbtion at apex(R)
- .dentin translucency (T)
- Each of regressive changes have seven grades
(0,0.5,1,1.5,2,2.5,3) - Age 11.02(5.14A)(2.3S)(4.14P)(3.71C)(5.57R)
(8.98T) -
43- b). Dentin translucency root dentin starts to
become translucent during the third decade of
life beginning at the apex and advancing
coronally. Hence as age advances refractive index
between intratubular organic and extra tubular
inorganic material is equalized resulting in
increased translucency of the affected dentin
zone. - Age B0B1X where B0 regression constant
- B1-regression coefficient
- X-length of translucency
44C).Age Estimation from Incremental Lines Of
Cementum
- From acellular cementum incremental lines
- Made us of mineralized unstained cross-sections
of teeth - D).Radiographic Method
- Used pulp size mesurement of six teeth
- 5 2 1 1 2 5
- 4 2 1 1 2 4
- Age 129.8-316.4(M)-66.8(W-L)
45- The measurement include several length and width
ratios such as - pulp-root length? P
- pulp-tooth length? R
- pulp-root width at CEJ? A
- pulp-root width at mid-root level? C
- pulp-root width at mid-point between level C
- and A ? B
- mean value of all ratio including
- excluding T? M
- mean value of width ratios B and C? W
- mean value of length ratio p and R? L
- Age 129.8-316.4(M)-66.8(W-L)
46Amino acid recemisation
- Suggested a relationship between dentinal age and
extent of aspartic acid recemisation in dentin. - Aspartic acid undergo rapid rate of recemisation
and get spontaneously converted from L-Aspartic
acid to D-Aspartic acid with increasing age. - Comparing D-L ratio age can be estimated.
47Cranio-facial estimators of age
- Cranial suture and also mandible provides certain
characteristic for elicitation of age
Surture Endocranial initiation Ectocranial termination
Sagittal 21 35
Sphenoparietal 30 65
Coronal 25 39
Squamosal 37 80
Sphenotemporal 30 68
Lambdoid 26 41
Mastooccipetal 26 72
Sphenofrontal 24 35
48INFANCY ADULT OLD AGE
BODY shallow Thick long shallow
RAMUS Forms an obtuse angle with the body Forms an approximate right angle Obtuse angle
MENATAL FORAMEN Located near lower margin of the body Midway between upper and lower margin Near alveolar margin
CONDYLE Occupies a lower level to the coronoid process Elongated and projects above the coronoid Neck is bent backwards
49TOOTH NO. MESIODISTAL M MESIODISTAL F BUCCOLINGUAL M BUCCOLIN- GUAL F
11 8.9 8.5 7.1 7.0
12 7.0 6.65 6.5 6.2
13 8.3 7.6 8.4 7.9
14 6.9 6.8 9.3 8.9
15 6.7 6.65 9.8 9.3
16 11.0 10.6 11.0 10.9
17 10.4 9.9 11.0 10.7
50TOOTH NO. MESIODISTAL M MESIODISTAL F BUCCOLINGUAL M BUCCOLIN- GUAL F
41 5.5 5.3 6.2 6.1
42 6.1 5.9 6.5 6.5
43 7.2 6.6 7.55 7.4
44 7.1 7.0 7.9 7.6
45 7.4 6.9 8.6 8.2
46 11.1 10.8 10.4 10.2
47 10.5 10.2 10.3 9.9
51- Cranial measurement (in mm) useful in sexing
- CRANIAL VARIABLES
Males Females
Cranial base length 112.5 103
Mastoid height 12.5 9.6
Mastoid width 24 19
Total face height 127 114
Bizygomatic breadth 129 122
Basion-nasion length 102 96
Cranial length 188 179
Nasal height 54 50
Maximum frontal width 120 115.5
52- Cranial measurement (in mm) useful in sexing
- MANDIBLE VARIABLES
Male Female
Bicondylar breadth 117 111
Bigonial breadth 100 91.5
Minimum ramus breadth 31 28.5
Gonion-gnathion breadth 77 73
Total mandibular length 111 108
53CRIME INVESTIGATION
- BITE MARKS
- A mark caused by teeth either alone or in
combination with other mouth parts (Mac Donald). - May be caused by humans or animals may be on
tissue, food items or other objects. - Human bite? broad, U-shaped somewhat circular or
oval. - Animal bite? narrow in the anterior aspect , V
shaped and elongated also morphology of the teeth
is different.
54Classification of bite marks
- 1.Cameron and Sims Classification
- Agents
- Humans
- Animals
- Materials
- skin,body tissue
- food stuff
- other materials
- 2.Mac Donalds classifications
- Tooth pressure mark
- Tongue pressure mark
- Tooth scrape mark
55- 3. Websters classification
- Type I
- Type II
- Type III
56Bite mark appearance
- Type of injury
- Identifying The Injury As a Bite Mark
- a). Gross features Circular or ellipticalwith
central area of ecchymosis - b). Class features Incisor?rectangular
- Canines?triangular or rectangular
- Premolars and molars? spherical or point
shaped - c). Individual features Class features intern
have characteristics such as fractures
rotation etc. - Site of Bite Marks
- Females? on breast, legs( inner part of
thigh)-sexual assault - Male children? genitals-child abuse
- Adult Males? finger, arms and shoulders-fight
57Bite mark investigation
- Preliminary questions
- Bite mark evidence collection from the victims
- if criminal in nature is reported to law
enforcement agencies - Steps
- 1.Visual examination
- 2.Photography
- Orientation photographs
- close-up photographs
- 3.Saliva swab WBC and sloughed epithelial
cells, potential source of DNA - 4.Impression Vinyl polysiloxane
- 5.Evidence collection from suspect using a
signed and informed consents or a court
order (warrant) also include photograph, two
casts, bite registration in centric occlusion and
saliva swab from buccal vestibule
58Bite mark analysis and comparison
- Jaw movement
- Flexibility of bitten tissue
- Individual features of bite marks
- Metric analysis
- Computer software program
59Conclusion Of Bite Mark Analysis
- Positive identification
- Possible identification
- Excludes identification
60Investigating Animal Bites
- Characteristics of some vertebrate dentition
- fish? conical, homodont, heterodont or
polyphydont - Reptiles? homodont conical or only
tricuspid teeth - Venomous snake? single row, palatal to this
are two poison fangs containing canal or groove
for venom release - Non-Venomous? two rows of maxillary teeth
- Mammals? heterodont dentition, diphyodont also
have accesssional teeth( permanent molar emerge
posterior to deciduous teeth) - carnivores? i
61Lip Prints
- Examination of lip print-cheloscopy
- Grooves an wrinkles visible on lips named as
sulci, labiorum rubrorum - Grooves are heritable and suppose to be
individualistic? so material evidence left at a
crime scene similar to finger prints - Lip prints classified as
- I) a) simple wrinkles
- straight line
- curved line
- angled line
- sine shaped curve
- b) compound wrinkles
- Bifurcated
- trifurcated
- anomalous
- II)type 1- clear cut vertical grooves that run
across the entire lip - type 1-similar to type 1 but not cover the
entirely - type 2- branched grooves
- type 3- intercepted grooves
- type4- recticular grooves
- type 5- grooves that can not be morphologically
differentiated
62DENTIST AS AN EXPERT WITNESS
- Expert witness are those whose training,
qualification or experience enables them to give
an opinion on relevant matter where the ordinary
person is not so enabled. - To become dental expert to forensic dental expert
need additional knowledge and experience