Can u generate ai imagto explain a answer
True vs false virgin
A clean medical education comparison chart titled "True Virgin vs False Virgin / Defloration" from forensic medicine and sexual jurisprudence. Two-column comparison table with labeled anatomical features: Definition, Hymen (admits only tip of little finger vs easily admits two fingers), Clitoris (small vs enlarged), Labia minora (small pinkish covered with labia majora vs enlarged pigmented separated), Labia majora (fleshy completely closing vaginal orifice vs less fleshy separated), Vagina (narrow with marked rugosity vs roomy with less rugosity), Fourchette (intact vs ruptured), Posterior commissure, Nipples and areola (small and pink vs enlarged and pigmented). Academic medical textbook style diagram with anatomical illustrations and clear labels. Include a note: "In defloration, hymen is ruptured but rest of features are same as false virgin."

| Feature | True Virgin | False Virgin / Defloration |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Never had intercourse; hymen intact | Had intercourse but hymen intact (ruptured in defloration) |
| Hymen | Admits only tip of little finger | Easily admits two fingers |
| Clitoris | Small | Enlarged |
| Labia minora | Small, pinkish, covered with labia majora | Enlarged, pigmented, separated from majora |
| Labia majora | Fleshy, completely close vaginal orifice | Less fleshy, separated |
| Vagina | Narrow with marked rugosity | Roomy with less rugosity |
| Fourchette | Intact | Ruptured |
| Nipples & Areola | Small and pink | Enlarged and pigmented |
Note: In defloration, the hymen is ruptured, but the rest of the features are the same as a false virgin.
Live born vs dead born genrate same type of ai image
A clean medical education comparison chart titled "Stillborn (Liveborn) vs Deadborn (Stillborn) - Forensic Medicine" for medical students. Two-column comparison table with the following labeled features: Definition (Stillborn: Born after 28 weeks, shows signs of life after birth vs Deadborn: Already dead in uterus before birth process begins), Volume of lungs (Large vs Small), Colour of lungs (Mottled salmon pink vs Uniformly bluish red), Consistency (Soft spongy vs Dense firm), Margins (Rounded vs Sharp), Level of diaphragm (6th-7th rib vs 4th-5th rib), Hydrostatic test (Positive - lungs float in water vs Negative - sinks in water), Fodere's test weight of lung (60-70g vs 30-40g), Ploucquet's test lung to baby weight ratio (1:35 vs 1:70), Breslau's second life test (Stomach floats in water - air in stomach vs Stomach sinks in water), MLI (Indicates live birth vs Indicates stillbirth/deadborn infant). Academic medical textbook style with lung diagrams showing aerated vs collapsed lungs, clear labels, teal and navy color scheme, professional forensic medicine layout.

| Feature | Stillborn / Respired Lungs (Liveborn) | Deadborn / Unrespired Lungs (Stillborn) |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Born after 28 weeks; shows signs of life after birth | Already dead in uterus before birth process begins |
| Volume of lungs | Large | Small |
| Colour | Mottled, salmon pink | Uniformly bluish red |
| Consistency | Soft, spongy | Dense, firm |
| Margins | Rounded | Sharp |
| Level of diaphragm | 6th-7th rib | 4th-5th rib |
| Hydrostatic test | Positive (lungs float in water) | Negative (sinks in water) |
| Fodere's test (wt. of lung) | 60-70 g | Around 30-40 g |
| Ploucquet's test (lung : baby wt.) | 1:35 | 1:70 |
| Breslau's 2nd life test | Stomach floats in water (air in stomach) | Stomach sinks in water |
| MLI | Indicates live birth | Indicates stillbirth / deadborn infant |
Key memory tip: Liveborn lungs are large, light, and float - Deadborn lungs are small, dense, and sink.
I need small small diagram in each difference table
A detailed medical education infographic comparison chart titled "Stillborn (Liveborn) vs Deadborn (Stillborn)" for forensic medicine students. Each row has a small illustrative icon or mini diagram next to the feature name. Layout: three columns - Feature (with small icon), Stillborn/Liveborn, Deadborn/Stillborn. Row 1 - Definition: small icon of a baby with heartbeat line vs baby in womb with X mark Row 2 - Volume of lungs: small icon of large inflated lungs vs small deflated lungs Row 3 - Colour: small colored circle showing mottled salmon pink vs uniformly bluish-red color swatch Row 4 - Consistency: small sponge icon (soft spongy) vs rock/firm icon (dense firm) Row 5 - Margins: small rounded blob shape vs sharp-edged shape Row 6 - Level of diaphragm: small rib cage diagram with line at 6th-7th rib vs 4th-5th rib highlighted Row 7 - Hydrostatic test: small icon of lung floating in water bowl vs lung sinking in water bowl Row 8 - Fodere's test: small weighing scale showing 60-70g vs 30-40g Row 9 - Ploucquet's test: small ratio diagram 1:35 vs 1:70 Row 10 - Breslau's test: small stomach floating vs stomach sinking in water Row 11 - MLI: small checkmark "Live birth" vs X mark "Stillbirth" Clean academic medical style, teal and navy blue color scheme, white background, professional forensic medicine textbook layout, clear readable fonts.

For male and female pelvis generate same ai image
A detailed medical education infographic comparison chart titled "Male Pelvis vs Female Pelvis" for forensic medicine and anatomy students. Three columns: Feature (with small anatomical icon/diagram), Male Pelvis, Female Pelvis. Each row has a tiny illustrative diagram. Row 1 - Pre-auricular sulcus: small groove diagram - Narrow shallow vs Broad deep Row 2 - Subpubic angle: small angle diagram showing V-shape (70-75 degrees) vs U-shape (90-100 degrees) with angle lines drawn Row 3 - Sciatic notch: small curved notch shape - Small narrow deep vs Large wide shallow Row 4 - Pubis body: small pubis bone shape - Narrow and triangular vs Broad and square Row 5 - Ischial spines: small spine projection icon - More prominent (pointing inward) vs Less prominent Row 6 - Ischial tuberosity: small bone icon - Inverted vs Everted (turned outward) Row 7 - Obturator foramen: small foramen shape - Oval vs Triangular apex forwards Row 8 - Pelvic inlet: small inlet shape drawing - Heart-shaped vs Circular/elliptical Row 9 - Pelvic cavity: small cavity cross-section - Funnel-shaped (narrow) vs Broad (wide) Row 10 - Pelvic outlet: small outlet shape - Smaller vs Larger Row 11 - Sacroiliac joint surface: small joint surface - Large less angulated vs Small L-shaped Top of chart: side-by-side simplified anatomical drawings of male pelvis (narrow, heart-shaped inlet, funnel cavity) and female pelvis (wide, round inlet, broad cavity) for visual reference. Clean academic medical style, blue and pink color scheme for male/female, white background, professional anatomy textbook layout, clear readable fonts, forensic identification chapter style.

| Feature | Male Pelvis | Female Pelvis |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-auricular sulcus | Narrow, shallow | Broad, deep |
| Subpubic angle | V-shaped (70°-75°) | U-shaped (90°-100°) |
| Sciatic notch | Small, narrow, deep | Large, wide, shallow |
| Pubis body | Narrow and triangular | Broad and square |
| Ischial spines | More prominent | Less prominent |
| Ischial tuberosity | Inverted | Everted |
| Obturator foramen | Oval | Triangular, apex forwards |
| Pelvic inlet | Heart-shaped | Circular / elliptical |
| Pelvic cavity | Funnel-shaped | Broad |
| Pelvic outlet | Smaller | Larger |
| Sacroiliac joint surface | Large, less angulated | Small and L-shaped |
Quick memory tip: Female pelvis is built for childbirth - wider, broader, more circular. Male pelvis is narrower and deeper - built for support and strength.
Where is image

Why u have given 2 images give one right side one is ok

In this image also u have duplicate the table
A single clean medical comparison chart titled "Male Pelvis vs Female Pelvis" for anatomy and forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with a tiny icon), Male Pelvis, Female Pelvis. Each row has one small simple icon next to the feature name: - Pre-auricular sulcus: narrow shallow groove icon vs broad deep groove - Subpubic angle: small V-shape (70-75°) vs U-shape (90-100°) - Sciatic notch: small narrow deep notch vs large wide shallow notch - Pubis body: narrow triangle shape vs broad square shape - Ischial spines: spines pointing inward prominently vs less prominent - Ischial tuberosity: inverted icon vs everted icon - Obturator foramen: oval hole vs triangular hole - Pelvic inlet: heart shape vs oval/circular shape - Pelvic cavity: narrow funnel vs wide broad cavity - Pelvic outlet: small opening vs large opening - Sacroiliac joint surface: large flat surface vs small L-shaped surface At the top: two small side-by-side pelvis bone sketches (male narrow, female wide) as header illustration. Single table, blue color for male column, pink for female column, white background, clean medical textbook style. Do NOT repeat or duplicate the table.

Do for male and female skull
A single clean medical comparison chart titled "Male Skull vs Female Skull" for anatomy and forensic medicine identification. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with a tiny icon/mini diagram), Male Skull, Female Skull. At the top: two small side-by-side skull sketches - male skull (angular, prominent brow ridges, sloping forehead) and female skull (rounded, smooth, vertical forehead) as header illustration. Each row has one small simple icon next to the feature name: - Forehead: small profile head silhouette showing sloping/receding forehead vs vertical forehead - Glabella and supraorbital margins: small brow ridge icon - More prominent vs Less prominent - Orbits: small eye socket shape - Square-shaped and small vs Round-shaped and large - Mastoid process: small bump icon behind ear - Large round and blunt vs Small and pointed - Frontonasal junction: small nose-forehead junction - Presence of angulation (sharp) vs Smoothly curved - Zygomatic arch: small cheekbone arc - More prominent vs Less prominent - External occipital protuberance: small back-of-skull bump - More prominent vs Less prominent - Parietal eminence: small side skull bulge - Less prominent vs More prominent - Frontal eminence: small forehead bump - Less prominent vs More prominent - Palate: small palate arch shape - U-shaped vs Parabola-shaped - Suprameatal crest: small ridge icon - Present vs Absent Blue color for male column, pink for female column, white background, clean medical textbook style, single table no repetition.

| Feature | Male Skull | Female Skull |
|---|---|---|
| Forehead | Sloping / receding | Vertical |
| Glabella & supraorbital margins | More prominent | Less prominent |
| Orbits | Square-shaped and small | Round-shaped and large |
| Mastoid process | Large, round and blunt | Small and pointed |
| Frontonasal junction | Presence of angulation | Smoothly curved |
| Zygomatic arch | More prominent | Less prominent |
| External occipital protuberance | More prominent | Less prominent |
| Parietal eminence | Less prominent | More prominent |
| Frontal eminence | Less prominent | More prominent |
| Palate | U-shaped | Parabola-shaped |
| Suprameatal crest | Present | Absent |
Memory tip: Male skull is angular, rough, and prominent. Female skull is smooth, rounded, and gracile.
Add small diagrams in male and female colum also for comparison
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Male Skull vs Female Skull" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature, Male Skull, Female Skull. Every cell in Male and Female columns has BOTH a small diagram/icon AND the text label. At the top: two detailed skull sketches side by side - male skull (angular jaw, heavy brow ridge, sloping forehead) labeled MALE and female skull (rounded, smooth, vertical forehead) labeled FEMALE. Row by row - each male and female cell has a tiny drawing + text: 1. Forehead: [small side-profile with sloping forehead drawing] Sloping/receding | [small side-profile with vertical forehead] Vertical 2. Glabella & supraorbital margins: [thick prominent brow ridge sketch] More prominent | [thin smooth brow sketch] Less prominent 3. Orbits: [small square eye socket shape] Square, small | [small round eye socket shape] Round, large 4. Mastoid process: [large round blunt bump icon] Large, round, blunt | [small sharp pointed bump] Small, pointed 5. Frontonasal junction: [sharp angled junction line sketch] Angulated | [smooth curved line sketch] Smoothly curved 6. Zygomatic arch: [wide prominent cheekbone arc] More prominent | [narrow subtle arc] Less prominent 7. External occipital protuberance: [large bump on back of skull] More prominent | [small bump] Less prominent 8. Parietal eminence: [small side bulge] Less prominent | [large rounded side bulge] More prominent 9. Frontal eminence: [small forehead bump] Less prominent | [larger forehead bulge] More prominent 10. Palate: [U-shaped arch drawing] U-shaped | [parabola arch drawing] Parabola-shaped 11. Suprameatal crest: [ridge line drawing] Present | [flat area drawing] Absent Blue column for Male, pink column for Female, white background, clean single table, professional medical illustration style, no table duplication.

Generate this human vs animal hair like above ai image
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Human Hair vs Animal Hair" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature, Human Hair, Animal Hair. Every cell in Human Hair and Animal Hair columns has BOTH a small diagram/icon AND the text label. At the top: two microscopic hair cross-section sketches side by side - human hair (thin, fine, narrow medulla) labeled HUMAN HAIR and animal hair (thick, coarse, broad medulla) labeled ANIMAL HAIR. Row by row - each human and animal cell has a tiny drawing + text: 1. Texture: [thin fine hair strand drawing] Thin and fine | [thick coarse hair strand drawing] Thick and coarse 2. Root: [small bulb-shaped root illustration] Bulb-shaped | [small brush-like root illustration] Brush-like 3. Cortex: [cross-section showing broad cortex ring] Broader | [cross-section showing narrow cortex ring] Narrow 4. Medulla: [hair cross-section with thin broken/fragmented medulla down center] Narrow, noncontinuous, fragmented | [hair cross-section with thick solid continuous medulla] Broad, continuous 5. Medullary index: [small fraction diagram showing less than 1/3 ratio] Less than 1/3 | [small fraction diagram showing more than 1/3 ratio] Greater than 1/3 6. Tip: [cut/frayed hair tip drawing] Cut or frayed, uniformly distributed | [tapered pointed hair tip drawing] Tapered 7. Pigment granules: [pigment dots scattered throughout cortex drawing] Scattered throughout | [pigment dots clustered around medulla drawing] Mostly present around medulla Green column for Human Hair, orange/brown column for Animal Hair, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine microscopy illustration style, no table duplication.

| Feature | Human Hair | Animal Hair |
|---|---|---|
| Texture | Thin and fine | Thick and coarse |
| Root | Bulb-shaped | Brush-like |
| Cortex | Broader | Narrow |
| Medulla | Narrow, noncontinuous, fragmented | Broad, continuous |
| Medullary index | < 1/3 | > 1/3 |
| Tip | Cut/frayed, uniformly distributed | Tapered |
| Pigment granules | Scattered throughout cortex | Mostly around medulla |
Key memory tip: Human hair has a thin broken medulla and bulb root. Animal hair has a thick continuous medulla and brush-like root - medullary index >1/3 is the most important forensic differentiator!
Both the difference in ai generated image
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Part A: Dry Heat Burns vs Moist Heat Burns" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Dry Heat Burns, Moist Heat Burns. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two small skin burn illustrations - dry flame burn (charred black skin) vs moist steam/liquid burn (bleached wet skin). Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Produced by: [flame icon] Flames | [steam/water droplets icon] Steam or hot liquid 2. Site direction: [arrow pointing upward from below] Below upwards | [arrow pointing downward from above] Above downwards 3. Clothes: [burning clothes icon] Burnt | [wet clothes icon] Wet 4. Splashing: [no splash mark] Absent | [splash droplet pattern] Present 5. Singeing: [singed hair/fabric curling icon] Present | [no singeing icon] Absent 6. Charring: [black charred skin patch] Present | [clean skin] Absent 7. Color: [black burnt skin swatch] Black | [pale bleached skin swatch] Bleached 8. Vesicles: [blisters only on edges of wound diagram] On the edges | [blisters spread all over affected area] All over affected area 9. Scar: [thick raised scar drawing] Thick | [thin flat scar line] Thin Red/orange color for Dry Heat Burns column, blue color for Moist Heat Burns column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Part B: Moist Heat Burns (Boiling Water) vs Chemical Burns (Corrosives)" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Boiling Water (Moist Heat), Corrosives (Chemical Burns). Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two small skin illustrations - moist heat burn (sodden bleached skin with blisters) vs chemical burn (corroded devitalized skin with ulceration and brown-yellow staining). Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Site: [skin at and below contact point diagram] At or below site of contact | [skin at and below contact point diagram] At or below site of contact 2. Splashing: [droplet splash pattern] Present | [chemical splash pattern] Present 3. Skin: [pale sodden bleached skin patch] Sodden, bleached | [corroded eaten-away skin patch] Corroded and devitalized 4. Color: [bleached pale white skin swatch] Bleached | [brown-black patch for H2SO4, yellow patch for HNO3] Distinctive - brown-black (H2SO4), yellow (HNO3) 5. Vesicles: [blister bubbles on skin drawing] Present | [flat skin no blisters] Absent 6. Ulceration: [flat intact skin] Absent | [deep ulcer crater in skin drawing] Present 7. Clothes: [wet clothes icon, not burnt] Wet, not burnt | [stained clothes with chemical marks] May be burnt with characteristic stains Blue color for Boiling Water column, green/yellow color for Chemical Burns column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.


Key memory tips:
- Dry burns = flame, charred black, thick scar, blisters only at edges
- Moist burns = steam/liquid, bleached, thin scar, blisters all over
- Chemical burns = corroded skin, distinctive color (H₂SO₄ brown-black, HNO₃ yellow), ulceration, no blisters
Same for these 2 also
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Russell Viper vs Cobra (Viper Bite vs Cobra Bite)" for forensic medicine toxicology. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Russell Viper, Cobra. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two snake head illustrations side by side - Russell Viper (large triangular head, small scales, vertical slit pupils) labeled RUSSELL VIPER and Cobra (small head, large scales, round pupils, hood) labeled COBRA. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Venom: [blood vessel broken icon] Vasculotoxic | [nerve/brain icon] Neurotoxic 2. Pupils: [vertical slit eye drawing] Vertical | [round circular eye drawing] Circular 3. Reproduction: [live baby snake icon] Viviparous | [egg icon] Oviparous 4. Head: [large triangular head with small scales drawing] Large, triangular, covered by small scales | [small head with large scales drawing] Small, covered by large scales 5. Body: [short stout thick body shape] Short, stout | [long cylindrical slim body shape] Long, cylindrical 6. Tail: [tapering pointed tail] Tapering | [round blunt tail] Round 7. Fangs: [long mobile fang drawing] Long, mobile, canalised | [short fixed grooved fang drawing] Short, fixed, grooved 8. Maxillary bone: [only fangs on jaw diagram] Only fangs | [fangs plus other teeth on jaw diagram] Fangs and other teeth Brown/orange color for Russell Viper column, green color for Cobra column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Neurotoxic Snake Venom (Cobra/Krait) vs Vasculotoxic Snake Venom (Russell's Viper/Saw-Scaled Viper)" for forensic medicine toxicology. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Neurotoxic (Cobra/Krait), Vasculotoxic (Russell's Viper/Saw-Scaled Viper). Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two illustrations - cobra/krait with neural damage brain icon labeled NEUROTOXIC and Russell's viper with blood vessel/bleeding icon labeled VASCULOTOXIC. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Local effects: [wet gangrene with smell waves icon] Local necrosis, wet gangrene with putrid smell | [swollen bleeding bruised bite site with dry gangrene] Redness, swelling, bruising, bleeding, blistering, extensive dry gangrene 2. Local reaction: [small mild reaction icon] Less | [painful oozing wound] More, pain and oozing 3. Blisters: [flat skin no blisters] Absent | [serous and blood-filled blisters drawing] Serous and serosanguineous blisters 4. Head/neck signs: [drooping eyelid ptosis, drooping head drawing] Drooping head, lower lip, eyelids, blurring of vision | [swollen parotid jaw drawing] Bilateral parotid swelling - viper head 5. Neurological: [tingling face, paralyzed tongue, paralyzed limbs and lungs diagram] Numbness/tingling face, tongue paralyzed, limb and respiratory paralysis | [normal icon] Absent 6. Bleeding: [no bleeding] Absent | [petechiae, nose bleed, blood in urine icons] Petechial hemorrhages, epistaxis, hemoptysis, hematuria 7. Renal: [normal kidney] Usually normal | [damaged kidney] Acute renal failure, hypotension 8. Salivation/sweating: [sweating dripping icon] Increased | [normal dry icon] Normal 9. Classic signs: [5Ds label: Dyspnea Dysphonia Dysarthria Diplopia Dysphagia + 2Ps: Ptosis Paralysis] 5Ds and 2Ps | [coagulation test tube icon] Coagulopathy, incoagulable blood, 20 WBCT positive 10. Cause of death: [respiratory failure lungs icon] Respiratory failure | [hemorrhage bleeding icon] Hemorrhage, renal failure Green color for Neurotoxic column, red color for Vasculotoxic column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.


Key memory tips:
- Russell Viper = Vasculotoxic - bleeds, blisters, "viper head" parotid swelling, coagulopathy
- Cobra/Krait = Neurotoxic - 5Ds + 2Ps, drooping eyes/head, respiratory paralysis
- Death: Neurotoxic = respiratory failure | Vasculotoxic = hemorrhage + renal failure
Poisonous vs non poisonous snake
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Poisonous vs Non-Poisonous Snake Bite - Bite Marks" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Poisonous Snakebite, Non-Poisonous Snakebite. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two bite mark illustrations side by side - poisonous bite (two distinct fang puncture marks) labeled POISONOUS and non-poisonous bite (semicircular row of small teeth marks) labeled NON-POISONOUS. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Fang marks: [two single puncture dots drawing] Two fang marks | [semicircular arc of multiple small tooth marks] Semicircular set of teeth marks 2. Bite site: [swollen discolored skin with hemorrhage and cellulitis around bite] Discoloration, swelling, cellulitis and hemorrhage | [mildly red slightly swollen skin] Redness and slight swelling 3. Treatment: [antisnake venom injection + wound care + tetanus icons] Wound care, antisnake venom, tetanus | [simple wound dressing + tetanus icon] Wound care, tetanus only Red/danger color for Poisonous column, green/safe color for Non-Poisonous column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Poisonous vs Non-Poisonous Snake - Appearance" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Poisonous Snake, Non-Poisonous Snake. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two full snake body illustrations side by side - poisonous snake (small head scales, large belly scales covering full breadth, long fangs, compressed tail) labeled POISONOUS SNAKE and non-poisonous snake (large head scales, small belly scales not covering full breadth, short solid teeth, round tail) labeled NON-POISONOUS SNAKE. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Head scales: [small fine scales on head drawing] Small | [large broad scales on head drawing] Large 2. Belly scales: [large scales spanning full belly width diagram] Large, cover entire breadth of belly | [small scales not spanning full belly width] Small, do not cover entire breadth 3. Fangs: [long hollow channeled fang cross-section drawing] Long and canalized | [short solid stubby tooth drawing] Short and solid 4. Tail: [laterally flattened compressed tail cross-section] Compressed | [round cylindrical tail cross-section] Not compressed 5. Habits: [moon/night icon] Nocturnal | [moon/night icon] Nocturnal (same for both) Red/danger color for Poisonous Snake column, green/safe color for Non-Poisonous Snake column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.


Key memory tips:
- Poisonous bite = 2 fang punctures + severe swelling, cellulitis, hemorrhage → needs antisnake venom
- Non-poisonous bite = semicircular teeth marks + only mild redness → wound care + tetanus only
- Poisonous snake = small head scales, large belly scales, long canalized fangs, compressed tail
- Non-poisonous snake = large head scales, small belly scales, short solid teeth, round tail
Combine both
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Poisonous vs Non-Poisonous Snake" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Poisonous Snake, Non-Poisonous Snake. At the top: two full snake illustrations side by side - poisonous snake (triangular head, small head scales, large belly scales, long fangs, compressed tail, two fang bite marks) labeled POISONOUS SNAKE in red and non-poisonous snake (rounded head, large head scales, small belly scales, short teeth, round tail, semicircular bite marks) labeled NON-POISONOUS SNAKE in green. SECTION HEADER ROW: "BITE MARKS" spanning full width as a section divider in dark background. Row 1 - Fang marks: [two single puncture dots drawing] Two fang marks | [semicircular arc of multiple small tooth marks] Semicircular set of teeth marks Row 2 - Bite site: [swollen discolored skin with hemorrhage] Discoloration, swelling, cellulitis, hemorrhage | [mildly red slightly swollen skin] Redness and slight swelling Row 3 - Treatment: [antisnake venom syringe + wound care icons] Wound care, antisnake venom, tetanus | [simple dressing icon] Wound care, tetanus only SECTION HEADER ROW: "SNAKE APPEARANCE" spanning full width as a section divider in dark background. Row 4 - Head scales: [small fine scales on head drawing] Small | [large broad scales on head drawing] Large Row 5 - Belly scales: [large scales spanning full belly width] Large, cover entire breadth | [small scales not spanning full width] Small, do not cover entire breadth Row 6 - Fangs: [long hollow channeled fang drawing] Long and canalized | [short solid stubby tooth] Short and solid Row 7 - Tail: [laterally compressed flat tail cross-section] Compressed | [round cylindrical tail cross-section] Not compressed Row 8 - Habits: [moon/night icon] Nocturnal | [moon/night icon] Nocturnal Red color for Poisonous column, green color for Non-Poisonous column, white background, clean single table with two clearly labeled sections, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.

Question 10 and 11 separately
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Q10: Post-Mortem Staining vs Bruising (Contusion)" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Contusion (Bruise), Post-Mortem Staining. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two skin illustrations side by side - bruise/contusion (irregular dark purple patch anywhere on body) labeled CONTUSION (BRUISE) in purple and post-mortem staining (regular reddish-purple discoloration on dependent body parts) labeled POST-MORTEM STAINING in dark red. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Occurs due to: [ruptured vessel with blood leaking into tissue drawing] Rupture of vessels | [distended engorged blood vessel drawing] Distension of blood vessels 2. Site: [body outline with bruise anywhere] Anywhere | [body outline with staining only on lower/dependent parts] On dependent parts 3. Margins: [irregular jagged edged patch] Irregular | [smooth regular edged patch] Regular 4. Blanching: [finger pressing skin - no color change] Absent | [finger pressing skin - color fades/blanches] Present 5. Color changes: [bruise showing color progression yellow-green-brown] Present | [uniform fixed color patch] Absent 6. Extravasation: [blood leaking outside vessel into tissue] Present | [blood contained inside vessel] Absent 7. Effect of pressure: [finger pressing bruise - no change] No change | [finger pressing stain - blanches white] Blanches when pressure applied 8. On incision: [incision showing blood in surrounding tissues - cannot wash away] Blood in surrounding tissues, cannot be washed by water | [incision showing blood inside vessels - washes away] Blood in vessels, can be washed easily by pouring water Purple color for Contusion column, dark red color for Post-Mortem Staining column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Q11: Rigor Mortis vs Heat Stiffening" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Rigor Mortis, Heat Stiffening. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two body illustrations side by side - stiff body with ATP depletion biochemistry icon labeled RIGOR MORTIS in blue and stiff body in flames/heat environment labeled HEAT STIFFENING in orange-red. Row by row - each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Cause: [ATP molecule depleting after death icon] ATP depletion after death | [protein coiling/coagulating heat icon] Heat coagulation of proteins 2. Onset: [clock showing 1-2 hours post death] 1-2 hrs after death | [flame/heat exposure icon] After exposure to heat 3. Reversibility: [clock showing 36-48 hrs then body becoming flaccid] Passes off in 36-48 hrs, secondary flaccidity | [permanent lock/no-reverse icon] Permanent, does not pass off 4. Muscles: [full body muscle outline - all muscles] All muscles | [full body muscle outline - all muscles] All muscles 5. COHb in blood: [blood test negative icon] Absent | [blood test positive with CO molecule] Present 6. Associated findings: [normal autopsy/PM findings icon] Normal PM changes | [burn injuries + soot particles in airway icon] Burns, soot particles Blue/grey color for Rigor Mortis column, orange/red color for Heat Stiffening column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine pathology style, no duplication.


Key memory tips:
- Bruise = blood outside vessels, irregular margins, no blanching, color changes over time
- PM Staining = blood inside vessels, regular margins, blanches on pressure, washes off on incision
- Rigor Mortis = ATP depletion, reverses in 36-48 hrs, no COHb, normal PM findings
- Heat Stiffening = protein coagulation, permanent, COHb present, burns + soot particles found
Question 7 and 8
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Q7: Antemortem vs Postmortem Drowning" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Antemortem Drowning, Postmortem Drowning. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two illustrations - living person drowning in water (struggling) labeled ANTEMORTEM and dead body placed in water labeled POSTMORTEM. Row by row each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Froth at mouth/nostrils: [fine white frothy foam at mouth icon, reappears on pressing chest] Fine, white, tenacious, copious - pathognomonic, reappears on pressing chest | [no froth at mouth] Absent 2. Cadaveric spasm: [hand gripping grass/mud tightly drawing] Present - grass/mud gripped in hand | [relaxed open hand] Absent 3. Lungs: [large ballooned lungs with rib impressions, emphysema aquosum] Voluminous, ballooned, rib impressions, emphysema aquosum | [normal lungs] No such changes 4. Water in trachea/bronchus: [water in airway cross-section] Present | [dry airway] Absent or minimal 5. Water in stomach/small intestine: [water-filled stomach diagram] Present | [empty stomach] Absent 6. Paltauf's hemorrhages: [subpleural hemorrhage spots on lungs] Present - subpleural hemorrhages | [clean lungs] Absent 7. Diatom test: [diatoms found in bone marrow spleen kidney diagram] Diatoms in distant organs - BM, spleen, kidney | [no diatoms in distant organs] Diatoms NOT found in distant organs 8. Gettler's test: [left vs right heart chloride difference diagram] Chloride difference between right and left heart | [equal chloride both sides] No difference 9. PM staining: [face neck chest front reddish staining diagram] Present over face, neck, front of chest | [random distribution] Non-specific distribution 10. Cutis anserine: [goosebumps from cold water erector pili contraction] Due to contraction of erector pili in cold water | [rigor mortis stiffness icon] Due to rigor mortis of erector pili Blue color for Antemortem column, grey color for Postmortem column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.
A single clean medical comparison infographic titled "Q8: Hanging vs Strangulation" for forensic medicine. ONE table only, no duplicates. Three columns: Feature (with small icon), Hanging, Strangulation. Every cell in both columns has a small diagram AND text. At the top: two neck illustrations side by side - hanging (oblique ligature mark going upward toward knot, above thyroid cartilage) labeled HANGING in brown and strangulation (horizontal ligature mark around neck, below thyroid cartilage) labeled STRANGULATION in red. Row by row each cell has a tiny drawing plus text: 1. Signs of asphyxia: [mild asphyxia face icon] Less marked | [severe congested face, petechiae icon] More marked 2. Protrusion of tongue: [slightly protruding tongue] Less | [greatly protruding tongue] More 3. Bleeding from nose/ear: [rare blood drop] Rare | [blood drops from nose ear] More common 4. Ligature mark - Direction: [oblique diagonal line on neck going upward] Oblique | [horizontal straight line around neck] Horizontal 5. Ligature mark - Continuity: [incomplete gap at knot position] Incomplete | [complete full circle around neck] Complete 6. Ligature mark - Level in neck: [mark above thyroid cartilage diagram] Above thyroid cartilage | [mark below thyroid cartilage diagram] Below thyroid cartilage 7. Ligature mark - Base: [hard dry parchment-like groove] Hard, dry, parchment-like | [soft reddish moist base] Soft, reddish base 8. Abrasions/bruise around ligature: [minimal bruising] Less common | [multiple bruises abrasions around mark] More common 9. Tissues beneath ligature mark: [white glistening tissue cross-section] White, glistening | [hemorrhage ecchymosis in tissue] Hemorrhage and ecchymosis 10. Fracture of thyroid cartilage: [intact thyroid cartilage] Less common | [fractured thyroid cartilage] More common 11. Fracture of hyoid bone: [fractured hyoid bone] More common | [intact hyoid] Less common 12. Stains of saliva: [saliva stain on chin/chest] Common | [minimal saliva] Rare 13. Discharge of urine/feces: [minimal discharge] Less common | [urine feces discharge icon] More common 14. Seminal discharge: [seminal discharge present] Common | [absent] Rare 15. Manner of death: [suicidal person icon] Suicidal | [homicidal hands around neck icon] Homicidal Brown/tan color for Hanging column, red color for Strangulation column, white background, clean single table, professional forensic medicine style, no duplication.


Key memory tips:
- Antemortem drowning = froth at mouth (pathognomonic), cadaveric spasm gripping grass, diatoms in distant organs
- Postmortem drowning = no froth, no cadaveric spasm, no diatoms in distant organs
- Hanging = oblique, incomplete, above thyroid cartilage, hard parchment base, suicidal
- Strangulation = horizontal, complete, below thyroid cartilage, soft reddish base, homicidal