donated
No, not necessarily. Organs are usually useless for transplant donation after such a time has elapsed, and can only be donated to medical schools for students to study and dissect as part of their training. In any case, such donation can only happen if the deceased has especially stipulated that they are happy for this to happen. Normally, they are returned to the body for burial or cremation by the next of kin.
In cases where the autopsy is investigating an unknown cause of death as oppose to a routine confirmation of a suspected cause, or in cases where the dead person has been murdered and further investigation is needed to determine what they died of, how a bullet or knife wound entered and exited an organ etc., then the organ(s) may be retained for a longer period to be examined by forensic pathologists. If poisoning is suspected, then chemical tests may be done to confirm that this was the cause of death. During such time, the body is kept in cold storage in case any other part of it needs examination- finally, when a conclusion is reached and agreed upon, then the organs are placed back in the cadaver which is handed over to the next of kin for disposal.
Organs that are typically not tested in an autopsy include the brain, gastrointestinal tract, and reproductive organs. These organs are usually only examined if there are specific reasons to do so, such as specific symptoms or suspected abnormalities.
iyot lame
the organs inside of your brain is the cerebrum,cerebellum,and the brain stem
Afterwards his vital organs were removed during an autopsy
your brain is an organ and there fore had no organs in it
some or donated, some are put back, and some are incinerated.
The spinal cord connects tissues and organs to the brain.
The spinal cord connects tissues and organs to the brain.
to see what happened to him and if he was brain dead or damaged and if they can determine exact cause of death
Dr. Thomas Stoltz Harvey, the pathologist who performed Einstein's autopsy, removed his brain during the autopsy without permission from Einstein's family. He subsequently kept the brain for research purposes.
No. An autopsy showed that she passed away due to asphyxia caused by a seizure. During the autopsy the coroner found she had a brain abnormality that made her subject to having seizures, but no tumor was found.
There is no way to tell without an MRI or autopsy.