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– IMMUNOLOGICAL & CYTOKINE SIGNALLING FLUX:
Pathogen exposure or cellular distress triggers antigen-presenting cell activation. This results in the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines (such as IL-1, TNF-alpha, and IL-6) and triggers receptor-mediated cellular chemotaxis.
â– CLINICAL REGISTRY INSIGHTS:
Patient registry reviews depict high clinical validity in diverse populations, indicating highly correlated trends of symptom development and treatment responsiveness.
[HY-BOARD-1016]
🌟 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. Target specific monoclonal antibodies or immune suppressors to control the hyper-inflammatory cascade. Assess demographic representation when applying trial results to real-world patients.