The haemorrhage as result of intravital bleeding is considered, from forensic point of view, as important sign of vital reaction of injury. However, in special cases it must be accepted that haemorrhage occurred after the death.
The formation of supravital changes is evident e.g. in organs of donors whose blood circulation and pulmonary ventilation is kept after the brain death. The post-mortem origin of haemorrhages can also be seen in donors of eyeballs after encucleation made before the autopsy at Institute of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology.
These haemorrhages are manifested after several hours when eyeballs were removed. Moreover, we observed the origin of haemorrhage neither in orbit which was cause nor by intravital bleeding neither by direct force.
Its origin could not be explained nothing but postmortem propagation from fracture of anterior fossa of the scull base. We did not find information about postmortem origin or relocation of haemorrhage of such extent in the literature.
In the frame of knowledge about supravital reaction, this finding is of general importance with forensic impact. The documentation from the scene of the death allowed correcting the appreciation of the mechanism of injury and traumatic process from the point of view of foreign culpability which should be considered in such case (e.g. a blow to the orbit with following fall under passing subway train).