autopsy$6111$ - meaning and definition. What is autopsy$6111$
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What (who) is autopsy$6111$ - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Autopsy (Album); Autopsy (film); Autopsy (album)

John F. Kennedy autopsy         
  • The missing bullet—found on a used stretcher at [[Parkland Memorial Hospital]]—became the subject of the [[Warren Commission]]'s [[single-bullet theory]], often derided as the "magic-bullet theory" by conspiracy theorists.
  • Jacqueline Kennedy]].
  • House Select Committee on Assassinations]]
  • The President's limousine brought his body to [[Parkland Memorial Hospital]] in Dallas. It is pictured parked in the ambulance entrance.
  • The panel organized by Attorney General [[Ramsey Clark]] (pictured with President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] in 1968) found that two bullets struck Kennedy from behind.
  • In 1966, President Kennedy's brain disappeared from the [[National Archives]]. Some have suggested that his brother, [[Robert F. Kennedy]], may have destroyed it.
PERFORMED ON U.S. PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY, ON THE DAY OF HIS ASSASSINATION, AT BETHESDA NAVAL HOSPITAL IN BETHESDA, MARYLAND
List of people at the autopsy of John F. Kennedy; List of Persons Present at the Autopsy of John F. Kennedy; JFK autopsy; Kennedy's Autopsy; Autopsy of John F. Kennedy; Autopsy of JFK; John f kennedy autopsy; John kennedy autopsy; Autopsy of john f kennedy; Kennedy autopsy; Jack kennedy autopsy; J.F.K autopsy; JFK post-mortem; JFK postmortem; John F. Kennedy post-mortem
The autopsy of president John Fitzgerald Kennedy was performed at the Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland. The autopsy began at about 8p.
autopsy         
  • Charité Berlin]], Germany, 2010
  • Dissection, 19th century US.
  • [[Cadaver]] dissection tables are similar to those used in medical or forensic autopsies.
  • A field post-mortem exam of a female [[sheep]] (ewe)
  • Cavitation at gross pathology of an old stroke in the left posterior parietal lobe.
  • Dissection room at the [[University of Helsinki]] in Finland in 1928
  • Histopathology at high magnification of a normal neuron, and an ischemic stroke at approximately 24 hours on [[H&E stain]]: The neurons become hypereosinophilic and there is an infiltrate of [[neutrophil]]s. There is slight edema and loss of normal architecture in the surrounding [[neuropil]].
  • Pathologist performing a human dissection of the abdominal and thoracic organs in an autopsy room.
  • Autopsy of a brain after sectioning, showing a normal brain with the cerebrum cut in coronal sections, and the cerebellum, pons and medulla cut in horizontal sections. Standard sections for microscopic examination are annotated.
  • leptomeninges]], which appear to be [[edema]]tous and have multiple small hemorrhagic foci.
SURGICAL PROCEDURE THAT CONSISTS OF A THOROUGH EXAMINATION OF A CORPSE
Necropsy; Post-mortem examination; Post-mortem; Post mortem; Autopsies; Postmortem; Postmortem investigation; Post-Mortem; Postmortem analysis; Post mortum; Autospy; Postmortem autopsy; Necropsies; Judicial autopsy; Postmortem examination; Post mortem report; Autopsia cadaverum; Post-mortem examinations; Necroscopies; Necroscopy; Autopsic; Autopsy of stroke; Virtual autopsy
(autopsies)
An autopsy is an examination of a dead body by a doctor who cuts it open in order to try to discover the cause of death.
= post-mortem
N-COUNT
post-mortem         
  • Charité Berlin]], Germany, 2010
  • Dissection, 19th century US.
  • [[Cadaver]] dissection tables are similar to those used in medical or forensic autopsies.
  • A field post-mortem exam of a female [[sheep]] (ewe)
  • Cavitation at gross pathology of an old stroke in the left posterior parietal lobe.
  • Dissection room at the [[University of Helsinki]] in Finland in 1928
  • Histopathology at high magnification of a normal neuron, and an ischemic stroke at approximately 24 hours on [[H&E stain]]: The neurons become hypereosinophilic and there is an infiltrate of [[neutrophil]]s. There is slight edema and loss of normal architecture in the surrounding [[neuropil]].
  • Pathologist performing a human dissection of the abdominal and thoracic organs in an autopsy room.
  • Autopsy of a brain after sectioning, showing a normal brain with the cerebrum cut in coronal sections, and the cerebellum, pons and medulla cut in horizontal sections. Standard sections for microscopic examination are annotated.
  • leptomeninges]], which appear to be [[edema]]tous and have multiple small hemorrhagic foci.
SURGICAL PROCEDURE THAT CONSISTS OF A THOROUGH EXAMINATION OF A CORPSE
Necropsy; Post-mortem examination; Post-mortem; Post mortem; Autopsies; Postmortem; Postmortem investigation; Post-Mortem; Postmortem analysis; Post mortum; Autospy; Postmortem autopsy; Necropsies; Judicial autopsy; Postmortem examination; Post mortem report; Autopsia cadaverum; Post-mortem examinations; Necroscopies; Necroscopy; Autopsic; Autopsy of stroke; Virtual autopsy
also post mortem, postmortem (post-mortems)
1.
A post-mortem is a medical examination of a dead person's body in order to find out how they died.
= autopsy
N-COUNT
2.
A post-mortem is an examination of something that has recently happened, especially something that has failed or gone wrong.
The postmortem on the presidential campaign is under way.
N-COUNT: oft N on n

Wikipedia

Autopsy (disambiguation)

Autopsy is a Greek word meaning 'seeing for yourself', and is usually employed in a medical sense, referring to the examination of a corpse in order to determine cause of death.

Autopsy may also refer to: