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A New Way to Spot Menstrual Blood and Vaginal Fluid in Crime Scenes
Thursday, April 3, 2025
Now, here's where it gets interesting. The system's sensitivity changes based on the day of the menstrual cycle. On the first day, it needs just 1 ng of DNA to correctly identify menstrual blood. But by the fifth day, it needs 1. 5 ng. This is because the methylation levels at the markers change throughout the cycle. For vaginal fluid, the system needs at least 0. 5 ng of DNA for a confident identification.
The system was also tested on different materials found in crime scenes. Menstrual blood samples on seven types of materials were all correctly identified. Even simulated mixed samples of menstrual blood and vaginal fluid were tested and the results were spot on.
But here's a question to ponder: how reliable is this system in real-world scenarios? While the tests show promising results, more research is needed to see how it holds up in actual crime investigations. After all, crime scenes are messy and unpredictable. This system might need some tweaks to handle the chaos.
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