â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Cadaveric Spasm (also termed Instantaneous Rigor) is an uncommon, dramatic postmortem state where muscles lock in contraction immediately at the moment of death, completely bypassing the primary flaccidity phase.
â– PATHOPHYSIOLOGY:
1. Physical Stress: Triggered by intense physical exertion, acute pain, or severe emotional fear immediately prior to death.
2. Low Glycogen: Rapid physical exertion depletes local glycogen and ATP pools in working skeletal muscles.
3. Sudden Death: The patient dies suddenly in a high-stress state.
4. Immediate Rigor: The already-depleted ATP pools instantly drop to absolute zero, causing immediate sarcoplasmic calcium overload. Myosin heads lock on actin at that exact split-second, preserving the final posture.
â– RADIOGRAPHIC DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:
Imaging modalities (such as high-resolution CT, contrast-enhanced MRI, and point-of-care ultrasound) show characteristic density shifts, enhancement patterns, or structural deviations.
â– EMERGENCY DECREES & FAST-TRACK RESPONSES:
Upon presentation with extreme physiological disruption, initiate immediate volume restoration and broad-spectrum metabolic stabilization.
[HY-BOARD-1257]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
A major forensic tool used to distinguish suicide from homicide. If a victim has a suicide weapon (like a revolver or knife) clutched with extreme force in their hand, or underwater weeds clutched in a drowning victim, this indicates cadaveric spasm and confirms they were alive at the time of the event. Always correlate imaging signs with clinical presentation to avoid unnecessary surgical explorations of benign incidentalomas. Confirm central vital markers continually rather than relying solely on peripheral readings.