Submitted:
23 January 2026
Posted:
26 January 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
2. Introduction
2.1. Background and Emerging Reports


2.2. Rationale for Focused Structural Analysis
- 1.
- Classification: establishing whether anomalous intravascular casts (AICs) correspond to any known pathological category.
- 2.
- Differentiation: identifying structural features that distinguish AICs from ordinary postmortem clots or antemortem thrombi.
- 3.
- Foundation: providing a structural baseline necessary for interpreting subsequent elemental and proteomic analyses reported in companion papers.
2.3. Aim of the Study
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Sample Acquisition and Coding
3.2. Gross Morphological Assessment
- Dry weight (g)
- Total length (cm)
- Maximum and minimum diameter (mm)
- Lumen conformity and branching geometry
- Surface texture and sheen
- Elasticity (degree of stretch without fracture)
- Cutting resistance (including the characteristic “squeak” reported by laboratory staff)
- Tensile behaviour when traction was applied along the longitudinal axis
- Fragmentation behaviour (friable vs cohesive)
3.3. Histological Processing
- Bright-field illumination;
- High wattage tungsten lamp;
- Blue colour correction filter;
- Plan achromat objectives;
- 4×, 10×, 40× objectives;
- High-resolution CMOS sensor.
3.4. Histological Evaluation Criteria
- 1.
- Fibrinous lamination — concentric or layered fibrin architecture typical of organised thrombi.
- 2.
- Lines of Zahn — alternating platelet/fibrin and erythrocyte/leucocyte layers indicating formation under pulsatile flow (antemortem).
- 3.
- Fiber architecture — thickness, orientation, bundling, and interweaving pattern of fibrin-like fibres.
- 4.
- Cellular inclusions — erythrocytes, leukocytes, endothelial cells, or platelets entrapped within the matrix.
- 5.
- Matrix homogeneity vs heterogeneity — uniform vs patchy composition; abrupt transitions between fibrillar and non-fibrillar zones.
- 6.
- Vacuolation or voids — structural gaps suggestive of liquefaction, degradation, or gas artefact.
3.5. Ethical Considerations
4. Results
4.1. Gross Morphology



4.2. Histological Features





- Interwoven fibrin strands forming dense, directionally aligned networks;
- Distorted leukocytes with ruptured membranes, nuclear extrusion, and cytoplasmic leakage;
- Hemoglobin streaking in regions of erythrocyte lysis, no intact erythrocytes were observed;
- Marked regional variability across adjacent microscopic fields.


- Non-uniform fibrin assembly,
- Heterogeneous shear conditions, and
- Cellular stress or deformation during formation.
4.3. Summary of Morphological–Histological Phenotype
- Persistent elasticity and tensile strength
- Resistance to fragmentation/fibrinolysis
- White/cream colour rather than red/yellow
- Luminal conformity and branching
- Absence of gelatinous texture
- Partial but genuine Lines of Zahn
- Structured fibrin networks with sparse cellular inclusion
- Only partial Lines of Zahn (not continuous)
- Very low cellular content (complete absence of intact erythrocytes)
- Dense, homogeneous fibrin strands without normal layering
- Coexistence of laminated and non-laminated zones
- Atypical mechanical resilience
5. Discussion
5.1. Relation to Known Clot Types
5.2. Biological Plausibility
- Alterations in the availability or behaviour of circulating cells during clot formation,
- Fibrin assembly occurring in an environment where cell adhesion or entrapment was reduced, or
- Formation of a matrix dominated by polymerised protein with minimal cellular contribution.
5.3. Limitations
5.4. Implications and Future Research
- Biochemical composition of the fibrillar matrix,
- presence or absence of ancillary proteins involved in clot stabilisation,
- role of inorganic or trace elements in fibre structure, and
- formation pathways that give rise to this unusual phenotype.
5.5. Potential Clinical and Public-Health Significance
- Interpreting imaging or surgical findings,
- guiding clinical decision-making when unexpected intraluminal material is encountered, and
- understanding atypical clot presentations in patients with otherwise unexplained vascular compromise.
- Prospective surveillance protocols,
- standardised photographic and histological documentation, and
- integration of AIC recognition into forensic guidelines.
- Are these casts associated with specific clinical syndromes, comorbidities, or physiological conditions?
- Do they form rapidly or slowly, and under what biochemical milieu?
- How could they not contribute to unexplained cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, or microvascular events?
- How may they be treated and prevented intros suffering or at-risk?
- Elemental composition (Paper 2);
- proteomic architecture (Paper 3); and
- clinical context from prospective case documentation.
- Variant of known clotting phenomena;
- new subtype of fibrin-dominant obstruction, or
- distinct pathological entity with implications for vascular biology and public health.
6. Conclusion
6.1. Clinical and Diagnostic Significance
6.2. Pathological Relevance and Nosological Considerations
6.3. Public-Health Implications
6.4. Future Directions in Biomedical Research
- An extreme variant of fibrin-dominant thrombi,
- a novel subtype of proteinaceous intravascular obstruction, or
- a distinct pathological class with unique clinical implications.
Ethics Statement
Author Contributions
Funding
Competing Interests
Data Availability
Acknowledgements
Technical and analytical support
Clinical, mortuary, or sample access support
Scholarly input and discussion
Funding and material support
Ethical and logistical support
Additional support
References
- Bancroft, J. D. Bancroft’s theory and practice of histological techniques, 8th ed.; Elsevier, 2019; Available online: https://shop.elsevier.com/books/bancrofts-theory-and-practice-of-histological-techniques/suvarna/978-0-7020-6864-5.
- Cai, H.; Cheng, Y.; Shuai, Y. Experimental research on friction noise of rubber-based propeller bearings. Polymers 2023, 15, 3352. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Haviland, T. Worldwide embalmer blood clot survey (survey report). 2023. Available online: https://www.skirsch.com/covid/EmbalmerSurvey2023.pdf.
- Haviland, T. 2024 worldwide embalmer blood clot survey (survey report). 2024. Available online: https://www.howbadismybatch.com/amyloidsurvey.pdf.
- Hirschman, R. Embalmers have been finding numerous long, fibrous clots (public comment to CDC docket). 7 September 2022. Available online: https://downloads.regulations.gov/CDC-2022-0111-45027/attachment_1.pdf.
- National Ethics Advisory Committee. Standards for ethics review of health and disability research in New Zealand. Ministry of Health. 2021. Available online: https://neac.health.govt.nz/publications-and-resources/standards-ethics-review-health-and-disability-research-new-zealand/.
| 1 | Images courtesy of Richard Hirschman, Licensed Trade Embalmer; reproduced with permission. |
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