Detection of caspase as a sign of tissue damage

2001 
Abstract Caspases are cysteine proteases which participate in different stages of apoptosis. Apoptosis, cell death, programmed by its nucleus is associated also with a number of diseases and tissue damage. To this process increasing attention is paid also in the sphere of forensic medicine, in particular to make use of the diagnostic contribution in investigation of cause of death, vital reaction and time when the injury developed. In damaged tissues by immunohistochemical methods caspase activity was assessed. Caspase 8 activity (Flice) was detected in the heart muscle in congenital heart disease in a two-week old infant but also in ischaemia in a 58-year old woman with thrombosis of the coronary artery or in acute circulatory failure after an overdosage of pervitin in a 39-year-old drug addict. In the liver there was a positive finding in hepatocytes in chronic inflammatory changes caused by chronic alcohol abuse. An early caspase 8 reaction after an injury is suggested by positive findings in skeletal muscles of the neck and larynx in a 47-year-old man who was strangled. A positive reaction was proved only at the site of the line caused by the strangulation tool. However macroscopically nor by common histological staining the muscle tissue did not display any signs of injury at the mentioned sites. The results suggest that immunohistochemical evidence of caspase 8 can be used as a suitable complementary examination not only for detection of damaged tissue but also for evaluation of early stages of the vital reaction.
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