EFFECTS OF TESTOSTERONE, ESTRADIOL OR PROGESTERONE ON THE BODY DECOMPOSITION OF CASTRATED RATS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2176-7262.v41i1p43-49Keywords:
Forensic Medicine. Rat. Castration. Body decomposition. Testosterone. Estradiol. Progesterone.Abstract
Previous results from our laboratory showed that males and females buried in the same place and in the same environmental conditions, conduct the male bodies to reach complete skeletonization before the female ones. So, it was decided to investigate if castrated male rats submitted to different steroid treatments showed different body decomposition patterns. Fifty male Wistar rats were anesthetized at 21 days of age and 40 of them were castrated while 10 were submitted to sham surgeries. The animals were divided into the following groups: Co- Control (sham surgery); Ca- Castreted; T- Testosterone (castrated + testosterone propionate); E- Estradiol (castrated + estradiol cipionate); P- Progesterone (castrated + progesterone). The animals were killed at 81 days of age in a CO2 chamber and were buried in the same grave. Exhumation was done 120 days after burial. The body decomposition was more advanced in the Group T, decreasingly followed by the Groups P, Co and Ca. The Group E was not considered in the analysis because of the significant if differences in body weight in comparison to the other groups in the time of death. The results indicate that steroid sexual hormones can interfere in the process of the body decomposition. This experimental biological model raises an important implication for forensic purposes, once hormonal profiles can induce different aspects of the body decomposition in the same interval of time, opening a precedent to justify investigation of human material to avoid doubts in the determination of the time since death in criminal investigations.
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