The authors report the case of an unusual reason for an "exhumation." A young person "exhumed" a child's body involved in a road accident because he wanted to test methods for preventing or slowing down the process of postmortem decay.
We report on a case of a 23 years old man who was polytraumatized in a car accident. He survived with excellent clinical outcome, but 113 days after the accident he collapsed, massive bleeding out of the mouth started and the patient died within a few minutes. A gastric ulcer bleeding was assumed, but autopsy showed the break-in of a posttraumatic aortic aneurysm into the esophagus. The difficulties of in time diagnosis of thoracic aorta lesions are discussed.
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