Organ weight in 684 adult autopsies: new tables for a Caucasoid population.

The weights of normal organs were retrospectively culled for the years 1987-1991 from 684 forensic autopsy cases. All the subjects were Caucasoid adults who died of external causes and showed no pathological changes. The weights of the following organs were available: the heart, the right and the left lung, the liver, the spleen, the pancreas, the right and the left kidney and the thyroid gland. The external parameters used for statistical correlation were the age, the height, the body weight and the body mass index (BMI) of the deceased. The weight of all the organs was shown to correlate with at least one external parameter, with the exception of thyroids in females. Organ weights decreased with age except for the heart and the thyroid, and increased in relation to body height and/or BMI. Except for the heart, the organ weight showed a better statistical correlation with the body height than the BMI. These updated tables of organ weight were compared with the data collected in previous studies. Such tables have to be regularly updated by pathologists in order to keep organ weight as a good criterion to be used in post-mortem diagnosis.

[1]  U. Sprogøe-Jakobsen,et al.  The weight of the normal spleen. , 1997, Forensic science international.

[2]  M. McGee,et al.  Adult human thyroid weight. , 1985, Health physics.

[3]  J. J. Moar,et al.  Renal weights in the southern African black population. , 1988, American journal of physical anthropology.

[4]  William Francis Ganong,et al.  Review of Medical Physiology , 1969 .

[5]  S Hancke,et al.  Determination of renal volume by ultrasound scanning , 1978, Journal of clinical ultrasound : JCU.

[6]  L. Hegedüs,et al.  The determination of thyroid volume by ultrasound and its relationship to body weight, age, and sex in normal subjects. , 1983, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[7]  J. Ludwig Current methods of autopsy practice , 1972 .

[8]  P. Schmitz-Moormann,et al.  Lipomatosis of the pancreas. A morphometrical investigation. , 1981, Pathology, research and practice.

[9]  F. Sunderman,et al.  Normal Values in Clinical Medicine , 1950, The Indian Medical Gazette.

[10]  J. Myers,et al.  Weight of the spleen. I. Range of normal in a nonhospital population. , 1974, Archives of pathology.

[11]  R Hanzlick,et al.  Heart Weights of White Men 20 to 39 Years of Age: An Analysis of 218 Autopsy Cases , 1990, The American journal of forensic medicine and pathology.

[12]  H. Gray,et al.  Prediction of heart weight in man , 1943 .

[13]  M. Davies,et al.  The assessment of cardiac hypertrophy at autopsy , 1985, Histopathology.

[14]  B. Brinkmann,et al.  Harmonisation of Medico-Legal Autopsy Rules , 1999, International Journal of Legal Medicine.

[15]  W M Wiersinga,et al.  DETERMINANTS OF THYROID VOLUME AS MEASURED BY ULTRASONOGRAPHY IN HEALTHY ADULTS IN A NON‐IODINE DEFICIENT AREA , 1987, Clinical endocrinology.

[16]  T. Olsen Lipomatosis of the Pancreas In Autopsy Material and Its Relation to Age And Overweight , 1978, Acta pathologica et microbiologica Scandinavica. Section A, Pathology.

[17]  Harry L. Smith,et al.  The relation of the weight of the heart to the weight of the body and of the weight of the heart to age , 1928 .

[18]  M. Greenwood,et al.  A SECOND STUDY OF THE WEIGHT, VARIABILITY AND CORRELATION OF THE HUMAN VISCERA , 1913 .