<p>Puncture wounds on his neck, arms and legs were graphically detailed in the 51-page report which gives vivid detail supporting last August’s conclusion that Jackson died from “acute propofol intoxication”, reported CNN online.<br /><br />In a final blow to the pop icon’s battered image, the autopsy also revealed that Jackson’s “sparse” hair was “connected to a wig”.<br /><br />There were 13 puncture marks on Jackson’s body, and 38 marks in total.<br /><br />Jackson weighed 136 pounds and was 69 inches tall, and the front of Jackson’s scalp, from his hairline, was tattooed with dark ink over “frontal balding.” His eyebrows and the border of his eyelids were also tattooed and there was a “pink tattoo” on his lips. Murray who pleaded not guilty to the charges, told investigators he gave Jackson propofol, a powerful anesthetic, to help him sleep.<br /><br />The Los Angeles coroner’s office had previously said the 50-year-old star died from a lethal dose of propofol and Murray is charged with involuntary manslaughter by acting “without malice” but also “without caution and ircumspection.”<br /><br />The report, which concludes that the care the singer received in the final hours of his life violated accepted medical standards, will be a centrepiece in the high-profile prosecution case against the cardiologist.<br /><br />The report described the amount of propofol Jackson was given as enough to knock a patient unconscious for “major surgery”.<br /><br />Jackson, hired Murray as his physician while he prepared for what were to be a series of comeback concerts. Murray told investigators that he had been treating Jackson for insomnia for six weeks at the time of the singer’s death. He had given Jackson 50 milligrams of the sedative propofol diluted with the local anesthetic lidocaine every night via an intravenous drip.<br /><br />The doctor told the police he was worried that Jackson was becoming addicted to the drug and was trying to wean him off it.<br /><br />During the two nights before Jackson’s death, Murray said, he put together combinations of other drugs that succeeded in helping Jackson sleep.</p>
<p>Puncture wounds on his neck, arms and legs were graphically detailed in the 51-page report which gives vivid detail supporting last August’s conclusion that Jackson died from “acute propofol intoxication”, reported CNN online.<br /><br />In a final blow to the pop icon’s battered image, the autopsy also revealed that Jackson’s “sparse” hair was “connected to a wig”.<br /><br />There were 13 puncture marks on Jackson’s body, and 38 marks in total.<br /><br />Jackson weighed 136 pounds and was 69 inches tall, and the front of Jackson’s scalp, from his hairline, was tattooed with dark ink over “frontal balding.” His eyebrows and the border of his eyelids were also tattooed and there was a “pink tattoo” on his lips. Murray who pleaded not guilty to the charges, told investigators he gave Jackson propofol, a powerful anesthetic, to help him sleep.<br /><br />The Los Angeles coroner’s office had previously said the 50-year-old star died from a lethal dose of propofol and Murray is charged with involuntary manslaughter by acting “without malice” but also “without caution and ircumspection.”<br /><br />The report, which concludes that the care the singer received in the final hours of his life violated accepted medical standards, will be a centrepiece in the high-profile prosecution case against the cardiologist.<br /><br />The report described the amount of propofol Jackson was given as enough to knock a patient unconscious for “major surgery”.<br /><br />Jackson, hired Murray as his physician while he prepared for what were to be a series of comeback concerts. Murray told investigators that he had been treating Jackson for insomnia for six weeks at the time of the singer’s death. He had given Jackson 50 milligrams of the sedative propofol diluted with the local anesthetic lidocaine every night via an intravenous drip.<br /><br />The doctor told the police he was worried that Jackson was becoming addicted to the drug and was trying to wean him off it.<br /><br />During the two nights before Jackson’s death, Murray said, he put together combinations of other drugs that succeeded in helping Jackson sleep.</p>