Structures autopsy examination with organ system review, cause-of-death determination, and documentation. Use when performing autopsies, documenting autopsy findings, or determining cause of death.
Structures autopsy examination with organ system review, cause-of-death determination, and documentation.
The autopsy remains the definitive method for determining cause and manner of death, verifying clinical diagnoses, identifying unsuspected disease, and advancing medical knowledge. Studies consistently show clinical-autopsy discordance rates of 10-30%, with major discrepancies (Class I and II errors per the Goldman classification) that would have changed treatment or outcome. Hospital autopsy rates have declined from over 50% to below 5%, making each autopsy more valuable for quality assurance and education.
CAP accreditation (AUT checklist series) requires documented autopsy protocols, minimum turnaround times, and quality review processes. The National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) sets accreditation standards for forensic autopsies. Regardless of jurisdiction, autopsies must follow a systematic organ-by-organ approach, maintain chain of custody for medicolegal cases, and produce reports that meet both clinical and legal standards. CLIA does not directly regulate autopsies, but laboratory testing performed on autopsy specimens (cultures, histology, toxicology) falls under CLIA jurisdiction.
Perform a systematic external examination and documentation:
Follow a standardized evisceration technique (Virchow, Rokitansky, Ghon, or en-bloc per institutional protocol):
| System | Key Assessments |
|---|---|
| Cardiovascular | Heart weight (normal M: 300-350g, F: 250-300g), coronary artery cross-sections at 3mm intervals, valve circumferences, myocardial thickness (LV, RV, septum), aorta for atherosclerosis |
| Respiratory | Lung weights (normal M: 360-570g each), airways for obstruction, pleural surfaces, cut surface (edema, consolidation, tumor) |
| Gastrointestinal | Esophageal varices, gastric mucosa (ulcer, hemorrhage), intestinal mucosa, appendix, mesenteric vessels |
| Hepatobiliary | Liver weight (normal 1400-1800g), cut surface (cirrhosis, steatosis, tumor), gallbladder contents, bile duct patency |
| Genitourinary | Kidney weights (normal 125-170g each), cortical thickness, pelvis/ureters, bladder, prostate/uterus |
| Endocrine | Thyroid, adrenals (weight, cortex/medulla ratio), pituitary, pancreatic islets |
| Hematologic/lymphoid | Spleen weight (normal 150-200g), lymph node chains, bone marrow (sternum or vertebral body) |
| Musculoskeletal | Ribs for fractures, vertebral bodies, psoas muscle |
| Central nervous system | Brain weight (normal M: 1300-1400g, F: 1200-1300g), circle of Willis, cortical surface, coronal sections at 1cm intervals |
Order and collect specimens for ancillary testing as indicated:
Apply the WHO International Classification of Diseases (ICD) format for cause-of-death certification:
Part I (chain of causation):
Part II (contributing conditions):
Manner of death (medicolegal only): Natural, accident, suicide, homicide, undetermined, or pending investigation.
Classification of discrepancies (Goldman criteria for hospital autopsies):
Construct the autopsy report per CAP AUT checklist requirements:
Turnaround time: Per CAP AUT.08850, preliminary report within 2 working days; final report within 30-60 calendar days.