Immunohistological analysis of 31 human spleens from the 11th week of gestation to the early postnatal period suggested that fetal organ development may be preliminarily divided into four stages. At stage 0 the organ anlage contained erythrocyte precursors, few macrophages and almost no lymphocytes. Fetal spleens of stage I exhibited arterial vascular lobules and lymphocytes just began colonizing the organ. At stage II, B and T lymphocytes formed periarteriolar clusters. B cell clusters predominated, because B cells aggregated around the more peripheral branches of splenic arterioles, while T cells occupied the more centrally located parts of the vessels. The vascular lobules of stage I and II consisted of central arterioles surrounded by B cells, capillaries and peripheral venules. The lobular architecture slowly dissolved at late stage II when sinuses grew out from the peripheral venules into the centre of the lobule. Interestingly, the B cell accumulations around peripheral arterioles did not represent the precursors of follicles, but apparently persisted as periarteriolar B cell clusters in the adult splenic red pulp, while follicles containing FDCs developed at late stage II from B cells in direct contact to T cell clusters around larger arterial vessels. At stage III before birth the lobular architecture was no longer recognized. The chemokine CXCL13 was already present in vascular smooth muscle and adjacent stromal cells at stage I before B cells immigrated. CCL21, on the contrary, was only demonstrated in fibroblast-like cells supporting T cell clusters from stage II onwards.
The state of confusion in patients with severe disorientation and brain damage symptoms presents particular problems in gerontologic psychiatry. Six fatalities at different institutions due to improperly employed physical restraint and deficient surveillance are described. The causes of death involved strangulation which was accidentally caused by patients who become stuck between bedrails and mattress or who were fixed in an abdominal restraint belt or in a special protective blanket (mostly used for serious pre-conditions). The reconstruction of the scene of death was based in almost all the cases on the autopsy findings. We assume a considerable number of unreported emergency or fatal cases. The legal, psychiatric and nursing-related issues are discussed in this paper. Furthermore the precise documentation of the on-site appearance of the situation at discovery of death is called for. The indication for physical restraint should be limited as far as possible. Further studies in nursing homes and hospitals should focus on structural conditions with respect to the frequency of physical restraint in order to optimize the protection by quality standards.
A case of sudden death due to recurrent pulmonary thromboembolism is described. The fatality took place three and a half weeks following blunt trauma to the left popliteal region. The patient died unexpectedly. Autopsy revealed the source of the emboli as a sacciform venous aneurysm of the popliteal vein, an entity seldom described, but important to consider in cases of soft tissue popliteal masses or unexplained pulmonary embolism, especially in otherwise healthy individuals.
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