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1.
J Anal Toxicol ; 47(6): 535-540, 2023 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37300548

ABSTRACT

A middle-aged woman was found dead with multiple empty blisters of midazolam (MDZ) (DORMICUM®), equivalent to 450 mg, near her body. The autopsy revealed that the cause of death was secondary to an asphyxia syndrome. Standard toxicological procedures identified MDZ only in blood, urine and gastric content. A quantitative analytical method for MDZ and 1-hydroxymidazolam (1-OH-MDZ) was validated using protein precipitation, a phospholipid removal Ostro® plates and liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. MDZ and 1-OH-MDZ were quantified in peripheral blood at 910 and 534 ng/mL, respectively, and superior to 2000 ng/mL in urine. Reported to the body weight, the dose, which was lethal, was estimated to be 6.7 mg/kg. The usual dose used in the intensive care unit is 0.03-0.3 mg/kg. MDZ intoxication outside of hospital is rare given the restricted availably of this drug in France. Nevertheless, MDZ under oral form remains available in several countries. Toxic MDZ blood concentrations are described after intravenous administration for anesthesia and are not suited for oral intoxication. Based on the autopsy findings, police investigation and toxicology results, the cause of death was determined to be a self-inflicted oral MDZ acute intoxication, which is the first to be documented to the best of our knowledge. This fatal intoxication provides analytical data that could support subsequent toxicological result interpretation in similar forensic cases.


Subject(s)
Midazolam , Suicide , Humans , Female , Middle Aged , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Autopsy
2.
Int J Legal Med ; 136(1): 123-131, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34591183

ABSTRACT

Homicidal poisonings remain rare and can be difficult to detect, especially in the elderly or in medical settings. In this atypical poisoning series, a young nursing assistant purposely poisoned thirteen residents of a nursing home and killed ten of them. The medications used were a mix of psychotropic medications (cyamemazine, loxapine, tiapride, risperidone, and mirtazapine), under liquid formulation, which were inducing malaise and coma. The forensic investigation included analysis of blood, urine, hair, and bone marrow and exhumations of seven corpses up to 3 years after the inhumation. Hair collected from a hairbrush of a cremated victim have been analyzed. Bone marrow sample preparation was based on a liquid/liquid triple extraction. Hair were incubated after decontamination overnight at 55 °C in methanol. Segmentation was possible for seven samples, except for delayed exhumation samples (n = 4) and hairbrush hair sample (n = 1). The extracts were then analyzed using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) for unknown screening and using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) for a targeted screening and quantification. Screenings revealed the presence of the same mix of psychotropic medications. Cyamemazine, mirtazapine, loxapine, tiapride, and risperidone hair concentrations were 6-17,458 pg/mg, 74-1271 pg/mg, 9-1346 pg/mg, 13-148 pg/mg, and 3-5 pg/mg, respectively. Cyamemazine bone marrow concentrations were 229 and 681 ng/g and 152-717 ng/mL in blood. Patients' medications were also identified and quantified. This poisoning series provide analytical data that could support subsequent toxicological result interpretation in similar forensic cases.


Subject(s)
Bone Marrow , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Aged , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Forensic Toxicology/methods , Hair/chemistry , Humans , Nursing Homes , Retrospective Studies , Substance Abuse Detection , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods
3.
Drug Test Anal ; 10(6): 995-1000, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29045066

ABSTRACT

The use of new psychoactive substances (NPS) has rapidly increased over the last decade. In the last 4 years, producers increasingly appear to be targeting non-controlled synthetic opioids, involving fentanyl derivatives such as ocfentanil (OcF). Identification of metabolites is of major importance in the context of NPS use, as it could improve the detection window in biological matrices in clinical and forensic intoxication cases. Hence, this work aims to report a fatality involving OcF documented by the identification of metabolites. A 30-year-old woman was found dead at home: an unidentified powder was found near her body and some injection sites were found at the autopsy. Toxicological analyses allowed to determine the presence of OcF in the powder, blood (3.7/3.9 µg/L, peripheral/cardiac) and in other post-mortem samples. The most relevant potential CYP- and UGT-dependent metabolites of OcF were investigated in vitro using human liver microsome incubation and liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution mass spectrometry, and subsequently confirmed in post-mortem samples. Four OcF metabolites were produced in vitro (a mono-hydroxylated OcF, O-desmethylOcF, a hydroxylated desmethylOcF and a glucuronidated form of the O-desmethylOcF), and all except the glucuronide were observed in blood and bile post-mortem samples. Considering the relative intensity of the chromatographic peak areas, O-desmethylOcF can be suggested to be an abundant metabolite of OcF. Nevertheless, the relevance of O-desmethylOcF as being a complementary analytical target of OcF for OcF use detection needs further in vivo confirmation, especially through analysis of urines from users.


Subject(s)
Bile/metabolism , Forensic Toxicology/methods , Piperidines/blood , Piperidines/metabolism , Substance Abuse Detection/methods , Adult , Analgesics, Opioid/blood , Analgesics, Opioid/metabolism , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Female , Humans , Microsomes, Liver/metabolism , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
4.
Curr Pharm Des ; 23(36): 5502-5510, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28641534

ABSTRACT

The analysis of hair to detect drugs and drugs of abuse is performed in various contexts, including child protection cases, abstinence control programs, and workplace drug testing. This alternative matrix offers several advantages, such as a large detection window (months) and non-invasive collection. Segmental analysis of multiple hair strands for drugs and metabolites has been widely reported in the literature over the past three decades, whereas a review of the literature showed that there are only 26 articles that report the analysis of a single hair. They focus on two approaches: mass spectrometry imaging techniques, which improve the resolution of dating an intoxication or conventional methods, such as gas chromatography mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Improved sensitivity of LC-MS/MS techniques allows the evaluation of drug content in segments of a single hair. However, the units used to express the results vary, and depend on the authors. Following a review of the literature, we present a case that illustrates drug analyses both in a strand of hair and a single hair. In this case of exposure of a child to zuclopenthixol (ZPT), the analysis of ZPT in a single segmented hair by LC-MS/MS strengthened the presumption of a single administration.


Subject(s)
Antipsychotic Agents/analysis , Clopenthixol/analysis , Hair/chemistry , Hair/growth & development , Substance Abuse Detection/methods , Antipsychotic Agents/metabolism , Child, Preschool , Clopenthixol/metabolism , Hair/metabolism , Humans , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Time Factors
5.
Geriatr Psychol Neuropsychiatr Vieil ; 14(2): 142-50, 2016 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27052601

ABSTRACT

The elder abuse is a major public health problem. In the world, almost 4 to 10% of people of more than 65 years would be abuse. The generalist practitioners report only 2% of the elder abuse. Furthermore, the evaluations of elder abuse screenings test found in the scientist literature were unsatisfactory. Evaluate the elder abuse screening capacities of the Vulnerability to abuse screen scale (VASS) in order to propose it to the doctors. VASS was translated in French. It's a quantitative and a forward-looking study whose the answers of people of more than 65 years old were analysed and compared in blind way to the answers of socials workers. 200 patients were included between March and May 2012 in the CHU of Cimiez, Nice. We found 104 patients in danger of abuse, 40 cases of abuse revealed by the socials workers, so 20% of abuses were reported by the gold standard. It means a sensibility of 90,9%, a specificity of 49,7% and a predictive value of 96,1% to a score of 1 to the test. The screening test VASS shown it useful to detect elder people in danger of abuse but a few discriminants and not adapted to patients who have cognitive pathologies. It's a screening tool usable by default, more sensitive than others tests in the scientist literature. However, these results ask the question of the useful of these tools of elder abuse screening in comparison with the education of doctors which made proofs of success in this subject.


Subject(s)
Elder Abuse/diagnosis , Elder Abuse/statistics & numerical data , Neuropsychological Tests , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Language , Male , Reproducibility of Results , Social Workers
7.
Cardiovasc Pathol ; 20(4): 242-3, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20801689

ABSTRACT

Cardiac metastases are rare events encountered in pathological practice but with often dramatic fatal outcome. Among malignancies associated with cardiac involvement, we would like to draw the attention of clinicians about lingual squamous cell carcinoma by reporting a sudden cardiac death in a 57-year-old woman without prior symptom and considered in remission 1 month before her death. The forensic autopsy led to the diagnosis emphasizing its role in epidemiology and public health.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/secondary , Death, Sudden, Cardiac/etiology , Death, Sudden, Cardiac/pathology , Heart Neoplasms/pathology , Heart Neoplasms/secondary , Tongue Neoplasms/pathology , Female , Humans , Middle Aged
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