Unexpected results found in larvae samples from two postmortem forensic cases
Autor: | Matthias Graw, Frank Musshoff, Gabriele Roider, Olwen Groth, Julia Krueger, Torsten Dame, Helena Fels, Simon Franz |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Synthetic opioid
business.industry Cannabinoids Biochemistry (medical) Physiology Autopsy Forensic Medicine Toxicology Pathology and Forensic Medicine chemistry.chemical_compound Benzodiazepines chemistry Postmortem Changes Synthetic cannabinoids Medicine Humans Tissue distribution Etizolam business Putrefaction Xenobiotic Pharmaceutical Substances medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Forensic toxicology. 40(1) |
ISSN: | 1860-8965 |
Popis: | Purpose In forensics, entomological specimens can be used as additional/alternative matrices to detect xenobiotics when human specimens are limited in their application. Despite some advantages over implementing putrefied human remains, most medico-legal laboratories do not include entomotoxicological procedures as routine analytical methods. We thus applied two authentic cases to evaluate necrophagous larvae’s potential as complementary matrices for toxicological analysis after extensive postmortem decomposition. Methods Larvae and postmortem human samples, including hair, stomach contents, pericardial fluid, liver, lung, and skeletal muscle, were collected at autopsy. Samples were analyzed by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography–quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry for pharmaceutical substances, illicit drugs, and new psychoactive substances, including synthetic cannabinoids, benzodiazepines, new synthetic opioids, and stimulants. Results Nearly all substances detected in human specimens, including several benzodiazepines and synthetic cannabinoids, were also detected in larvae. Surprisingly, some drugs, including the new psychoactive substances EAM-2201 and U-47700, were found exclusively in larvae and hair. The benzodiazepine etizolam was detected only in liver, lungs, and stomach contents, possibly resulting from characteristic tissue distribution in humans and/or larvae. Conclusions Antemortem external hair contamination with synthetic cannabinoids from side-stream smoke and postmortem hair contamination with substances in putrefaction fluids can be supposed in these cases. Our findings suggest that supplementary information can indeed be gained from analyzing larvae additional to those human specimens that are typically used for toxicological analysis after extensive postmortem decomposition. Nevertheless, these results represent merely two cases, requiring in-depth studies to determine whether such findings can identify acute intoxications as possible causes of death. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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