Determination of time of death belongs to the most difficult and also the most important issues for the medical examiners, especially those who deal with violent death. Besides the most frequently evaluated postmortal changes it is sometimes possible to perform the evaluation on the basis of less frequently observede findings.
One of such findings is for example the fungal multiplication on the body or in te very close vicinity. Knowledge of moulds as well as information about their speed of growth should contribute to confirmation or negation of some information gained during police investigation.
In this case report authors describe the mascroscopically visibe fungal intracardiac multiplication in heart chambers and aorta in an almost totally carbonised body which was missing for only ten days. Based on the molecular examination it was detected that the body belonged to the 64-year-old man who was repeatedly hospitalised in psychiatry for depression with suicidal tedencies. the last hospitalisation was six weeks before death and there was no organic disability.
The cause of fire was a naked flame. the cause of death was burn injury or asphyxia. The almost total carbonisation did not allow to perform toxicological investigation.
By histological investigation we found te presence of wide long non-septate moulds growing in the heart muscle, which belonged to the order Mucor. Since there was no obvious inflammatory response, we suppose their growth started on the congraled blood after death.