Chapter 8 Forensic Serology. Forensic Serology Introduction 1901, Karl Landsteiner found blood to be distinguishable by group –Led to the classification.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8 FORENSIC SEROLOGY.
Advertisements

The Nature of Blood. Serology Serology is the examination and analysis of body fluids. A forensic serologist may analyze a variety of body fluids including.
Identification and Characterization of Blood and Bloodstains
12.2 Notes - Techniques.
Chapter 11; Blood.
Forensic Serology Identification Using Blood Groups This presentation contains graphic pictures.
Blood Type (ABO).
Blood Typing Practice More Blood Notes Forensic Science 12/19/14.
Chapter 10 Blood You will learn:
ID & Characterization of Blood & Bloodstain. BEFORE DNA THERE WAS: SEROLOGY.
Identification and Characterization of Blood and Bloodstains.
Criminalistics Chapter 12
The study of body fluids
Lecture: Forensic Serology
The Nature of Blood 12.1 Notes. Objectives List the A-B-O antigens and antibodies found in the blood for each of the four blood types: A, B, AB, and O.
0 Blood  That an antibody and an antigen of different types will agglutinate, or clump, when mixed together.  That the significance of the evidence depends.
Forensic Serology Blood. What Exactly is BLOOD?? Fluid portion of blood= PLASMA – Primarily water and is 55% of the blood Suspended in the plasma are.
8-1 PRENTICE HALL ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE An Introduction By Richard Saferstein FORENSIC SEROLOGY Chapter.
Serology. Study of bodily fluids: blood, semen, saliva, urine, vaginal secretions, and excrement DNA can also be collected from these samples.
8-1 PRENTICE HALL ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE An Introduction By Richard Saferstein FORENSIC SEROLOGY Chapter.
Blood and Blood Spatter Serology Blood Spatter Analysis.
8-1 PRENTICE HALL ©2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE An Introduction By Richard Saferstein Chapter 8.
YouTube - The Sam Sheppard case
Chapter 12 Forensic Serology. Forensic Serology Introduction 1901, Karl Landsteiner found blood to be distinguishable by group –Led to the classification.
Forensic Serology Forensic Science. Copyright © Texas Education Agency All rights reserved. Images and other multimedia content used with permission.
Identification and Characterization of Blood and Bloodstains.
Serology Introduction Vocabulary. Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)- the molecules that carry the body’s genetic information. Plasma- the fluid portion of unclotted.
DETERMINATION OF BLOOD 12.3 NOTES –. OBJECTIVES List and describe forensics tests used to characterize a stain as blood.
What is blood? Blood is a mixture of several different components that are responsible for circulating nutrients, gases, and wastes –It contains enzymes,
Chapter 10 Blood. Serology Serology is the examination and analysis of body fluids. A forensic serologist may analyze a variety of body fluids including.
Forensic Serology. Blood l l A complex mixture of cells, enzymes, proteins & inorganic substances l l Fluid portion of blood is called the plasma (55%
Chapter 10 Blood.
Forensic Serology –In 1901 Karl Landsteiner discovered that blood has different types. He won the Nobel Prize for this discovery.
Forensic Science. Parts of blood Red blood cells Carry Oxygen Contain the antigens Most abundant cells in body White blood cells Part of the immune system.
Chapter 12 Forensic Serology
Identification Using Bodily Fluids
Unit 5 Forensic Serology. Blood and Forensics Karl Landsteiner in 1901 discovered that not all human blood was the same He came up with a classification.
WARM-UP Do you know your blood type? Have you ever donated blood?
Most common blood types:
Forensic Science. Blood What is made of? SUBSTANCE HOW DO WE KNOW IT’S BLOOD? Human?? Animal?? What does it do when it “travels”? BLOOD SPATTER.
College Forensics: Project Advance Chapter 12: Forensic Serology.
Forensic Serology Identification Using Blood Groups.
Forensic Serology Identification Using Blood Groups This presentation contains graphic pictures. Downloaded from
Blood Forensic Serology and Blood Spatter Analysis.
Forensic Serology.. Blood Classification Blood factors are controlled genetically Blood factors are controlled genetically >100 known blood factors >100.
Ch 12- Forensic Serology Blood types and their antigens and antibodies. Agglutination. Whole blood typing. Characterizing a stain as blood. Significance.
Forensic Serology: Blood and Blood Spatter Evidence.
Chapter 8 FORENSIC SEROLOGY.
BIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE BLOOD.
Chapter 12 FORENSIC SEROLOGY
Chapter 10 Blood.
Chapter 12 FORENSIC SEROLOGY
Forensic Serology Forensic Science.
Identification Using Blood Groups
Chapter 8 FORENSIC SEROLOGY.
Serology Forensics
Johnston Sr. High Forensics Mrs. Florio
Chapter 10 Blood “Out damned spot! Out, I say
FORENSICS OF BLOOD SUNDAY ACADEMY
Identification Using Blood Groups & Stains
Forensic Serology.
Blood and Blood Spatter
Serology Blood stain patterns.
Chapter 9 Forensic Serology
Chapter 9 Forensic Serology
Blood “Out damned spot! Out, I say
Bloodstains and Blood splatters
Forensic Serology: Blood and Blood Spatter Evidence
Chapter 8 FORENSIC SEROLOGY.
Chapter 8 FORENSIC SEROLOGY.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 8 Forensic Serology

Forensic Serology Introduction 1901, Karl Landsteiner found blood to be distinguishable by group –Led to the classification of the ABO system By 1937, the Rh factor was demonstrated –Numerous other blood factors/groups discovered –More than 100 different blood factors known to exist

Forensic Serology Introduction For the most part, no two individuals have the same combination of blood factors Blood factors are controlled by genetics; therefore, they are highly distinctive DNA has become the favored method of identifying individual through blood

The Nature of Blood Antigens and Antibodies Blood is a complex mixture of cells, enzymes, proteins, and inorganic substances –Plasma – the fluid portion composed mostly of water and makes up 55% of blood content –Cells - red blood cells (erythrocytes), white blood (leukocytes), & platelets are suspended in plasma and accounts for 45% of blood content Blood clots occur when a protein, fibrin, traps RBCs; the liquid that separates from blood when a clot is formed is the blood serum

Antigens and Antibodies Red Blood Cells –Transport oxygen from lungs to body tissue and then carbon dioxide from tissue to lungs –Antigens are present on the surface of the RBCs –Antigens impart blood- type characteristics to the red blood cells

AntigensAntigens A type A individual has A antigens on the surface the of the RBCs A type B individual has B antigens on the surface the of the RBCs A type AB individual has both A and B antigens on the surface the of the RBCs A type O individual has neither A or antigens on the surface the of the RBCs A type Rh positive individual has the Rh factor or D antigen

Antigens Another blood factor, RH factor or D factor, has been found A person with the D antigen is Rh positive; a person without the D antigen is Rh negative

Antigens and Antibodies It is the presence or absence of the three antigens – A, B, or D – that determine the compatibility of a blood donor and recipient. The fundamental principle of blood typing is that for every antigen, there exists a specific antibody.

AntibodiesAntibodies Antibody – a protein that destroys or inactivates a specific antigen; antibodies are found in the blood serum The blood serum which contain antibodies is antiserum For every antigen, there is a specific antibody, –Anti-A is the antibody specific to antigen A –Anti-B is the antibody specific to antigen B –Anti-D is the antibody specific to antigen D

Antigens and Antibodies in Normal Blood Blood Type Antigens in RBC Antibodies in Serum AAAnti-B BBAnti-A AB Neither anti-A or anti-B ONeither A nor B Both anti-A and anti-B

AgglutinationAgglutination An antibody will react only with its specific antigen –If serum containing anti-B is added to RBCs carrying the B antigen, the two will combine –Antibodies are typically bivalent – they have two reaction sites and can attach to two antigens on different RBCs The clumping together of RBCs by the attachment of antibodies is called agglutination

AgglutinationAgglutination

Blood Typing Serology refers to a broad scope of laboratory tests that use specific antigen and serum antibodies reactions Blood typing 1.Test blood with anti-A and anti-B serum 2.Test for the presence of antibodies, anti-A or anti-B, with known antigens

Identification of Blood with Known Antiserum Anti-A Serum + Blood Anti-B Serum + Blood Antigen Present Blood Type Agglutination No Agglutination AA AgglutinationBB A and BAB No Agglutination Neither A nor B O

Identification of Blood with Known Cells A Cells + Blood B Cells + Blood Antibody Present Blood Type Agglutination No Agglutination Anti-AB No Agglutination AgglutinationAnti-BA Agglutination Both Anti-A & Anti-B O No Agglutination Neither Anti-A nor Anti-B AB

If your blood type is... Type You Can Give Blood To You Can Receive Blood From A+A+ AB+ A+ A- O+ O- O+ O+ A+ B+ A B+ O+ O- B+B+ AB+ B+ B- O+ O- AB+ Everyone A- A+ A- AB+ AB- A- O- O-EveryoneO- B- B+ B- AB+ AB- B- O- AB-AB+ AB- AB- A- B- O- Out of 100 donors donors are RH+ 16 donors are RH- 38 are O+7 are O- 34 are A+6 are A- 9 are B+2 are B- 3 are AB+1 is AB-

Despite how well the crime scene may get cleaned up, even the finest trace of blood can often be detected and further tested. It is often the case that while the perpetrator may scrub down the obvious places, he can still miss between floorboards, under pipes, and inside drains. Merely by pouring water on some tiles at a murder scene and pulling them up wherever the water flowed beneath them, one detective found the only existing trace of the crime--blood. His discovery so surprised the killer, who felt certain he'd done a through job of cleaning up, that he instantly confessed. Forensic Blood Test

Forensic Scientist must answer the following questions when examining dried blood: 1.Is it blood? 2.From what species did the blood originate? 3.If the blood is human, how closely can it be associated with a particular individual?

Forensic Blood Tests Color Tests Luminol Precipitin Gel Diffusion

Color Tests Phenolphthalein indicator (Kastle-Meyer color test) –When mixed with blood and hydrogen perioxide, the hemoglobin will turn pink

Luminol Test When in contact with blood, produces light Highly sensitive – can detect bloodstains diluted up to 300,000 times Used to spray large areas such as carpets, walls, flooring, or interior of a vehicle Will not interfere with DNA testing CSI Miami Demo (Note – DNA can be tested with PCR techniques with diluted samples)

MicrocrystallineTests Microcrystalline Tests

PrecipitinPrecipitin Used to determine if blood is of human origin Animals will produce antibodies when injected with human blood; these antibodies, called human serum, can be isolated

PrecipitinPrecipitin Layer a sample of the bloodstain in a small test tube with a layer of human antiserum on bottom. The human blood will react with the antiserum forming a cloudy band in the test tube. Human Blood Animal Antiserum

Gel Diffusion Another type of precipitant test Extracted bloodstains and human anti-serum are placed in separate openings on opposite sides of a gel. Antigens and antibodies induced to move towards each other when an electrical charge is applied. A specific line is formed if the antigen and antibodies react together. Human Blood Animal Antiserum

PrecipitinPrecipitin Very sensitive tests requiring a small amount of blood Human bloodstains can be dried for as long as 10 to 15 years Diluted bloodstains can also give positive results

Iso-enzymes Forensic scientists can study polymorphic enzymes – enzymes that exist in different forms These enzymes are iso- enzymes –Multiple forms of an enzyme each with a similar function Iso-enzymes can be separated by gel electrophoresis; different people will have different iso- enzymes which can provide individual characteristics to the blood stain

The location, distribution, and appearance of bloodstains and spatters may be useful for interpreting and reconstructing the events that must have occurred to have produced the bleeding. The significance of the position and shape of blood patterns with respect to their origin and trajectory is exceedingly complex and requires an experienced examiner An analysis usually requires controlled experiments creating an environment comparable to the crime scene.

Stain Patterns of Blood Herbert L. MacDonell’s observation’s: 1.Surface texture is important in the interpretation of blood stain patterns and correlations between standards and unknowns are valid only if identical surfaces are used. In general, the harder and less porous the surface, the less splatter results.

Stain Patterns of Blood 2.The direction of travel of blood striking an object may be discerned by the stain’s shape. The pointed end of a bloodstain always faces its direction of travel.

Stain Patterns of Blood 3. It is possible to determine the impact angle of blood on a flat surface by measuring the degree of circular distortion of the stain. A drop of blood striking a surface at right angles gives rise to a nearly circular stain; as the angle decreased, the stain becomes elongated in shape.

Stain Patterns of Blood 4. The origin of a blood spatter in a two- dimensional configuration can be established by drawing straight lines through the long axis of several individual bloodstains. The intersection or area of convergence of the lines represents the area from which the blood emanated.

Stain Patterns of Blood Resources 2_itemId=3857http://projects.nfstc.org/gallery/main.php?g 2_itemId= forensics.com/Blood_Stains.htmlhttp:// forensics.com/Blood_Stains.html blood-evidence-2#why-are-blood-stains-studied- in-csihttp:// blood-evidence-2#why-are-blood-stains-studied- in-csi