Journal of analytical toxicology
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Comparative Study
A comparison of methadone, oxycodone, and hydrocodone related deaths in Northeast Ohio.
Increases in methadone and oxycodone related deaths have been recently documented in the United States. In response to these reports, the authors investigated cases over a six-year period in which postmortem toxicological analyses revealed the presence of methadone, hydrocodone, and oxycodone. The study was designed to determine whether regional methadone-associated mortality in Cuyahoga County reflected national trends and more specifically, to distinguish methadone mortality from other commonly used opioid analgesics. ⋯ Although the pharmacokinetic profiles differ, methadone, hydrocodone, and oxycodone lethal intoxications equally comprised 28-29% of cases in which these drugs were detected. There was an overlap in the range of blood concentrations observed for the drug-related death groups and the incidental finding groups. However, mean and median concentrations in oxycodone and hydrocodone related deaths were more than two times greater than those in non-drug-related deaths.
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The purpose of this paper is to report a case of fluoride poisoning along with a discussion of poisoning characteristics, analytical procedures, and a review of previous reports of fatal intoxications with analytical data. A case of suicidal ingestion of 40 mL of a rust removal agent containing hydrofluoric acid and ammonium fluoride by a 33-year-old white male is presented. He had an organic personality disorder with residual schizophrenia and previous suicide attempts with therapeutic drugs and cleaning products. ⋯ Fluoride analyses using the ion selective electrode are simple, sensitive, and rapid. This report provides an extensive tissue distribution study of fluoride after a well documented case of acute poisoning. Based on the autopsy findings, patient history, toxicology results, and previously reported data the forensic pathologists ruled that the cause of death was due to a fluoride poisoning, and the manner of death was listed as suicide.
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Testing oral fluid for drugs of abuse has been studied under many conditions but rarely has been evaluated in large population databases. We evaluated oral fluid tests in a database from a commercial laboratory in the United Kingdom composed of 8679 confirmed positive results. The results originated from 635,000 specimens collected over the period of May 2004 through September 2006. ⋯ The frequency of detection of 6-acetylmorphine when morphine was present (N = 4575 specimens) was 77.5%. Surprisingly, heroin (19.0%; N = 1091 specimens) and 6-acetylcodeine (24.9%; N = 1431 specimens) were frequently reported. The results from analysis of this large oral fluid database offer a rich mixture of new information on detection frequency, drug and metabolite patterns, and concentration data on drugs of abuse.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Pharmacokinetic properties of delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol in serum and oral fluid.
In a study on the effects of smoked cannabis (18.2 +/- 2.8 mg as low and 36.5 +/- 5.6 mg as high dose) paired blood and oral fluid samples were collected from 10 study participants up to 6 h after smoking and analyzed for the cannabinoids Delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), 11-hydroxy-THC (THC-OH) and 11-nor-9-carboxy-THC (THCA) using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Highest concentrations in serum were 47.8 +/- 35.0 and 79.1 +/- 42.5 microg/L at the end of smoking (low and high dose, respectively) and decreased to less than 1 microg/L during 6 h with elimination half-lives of 1.4 +/- 0.1 h calculated from 1 to 6 h, which is shorter than reported previously. The elimination half-lives of THC-OH (2.0 +/- 0.3 h) and THCA (3.4 +/- 0.9 h) were significantly higher. ⋯ Oral fluid/serum ratios were 46 +/- 27 and 36 +/- 20 (low and high dose, respectively), which are higher than previously reported and might be based on sample collection and/or analytical issues. In conclusion, despite similar elimination rates of THC in serum and oral fluid, which appear incidental, the high differences in oral fluid/serum ratios are not a reliable basis for correlating THC concentrations in oral fluid and serum. The oral compartment and its kinetics for drugs, particularly THC, are not yet satisfactorily understood.
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Aconite poisoning was examined in five patients (four males and one female) aged 49 to 78 years old. The electrocardiogram findings were as follows: ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation in case 1, premature ventricular contraction and accelerated idioventricular rhythm in case 2, AIVR in case 3, and nonsustained ventricular tachycardia in cases 4 and 5. ⋯ The half-life of the main alkaloid in case 1 was about twice as long as the half-lives in the other cases, and high values for the area under the blood concentration-time curve and the mean residence time were only observed in case 1. These results suggest that alkaloid toxicokinetics parameters may reflect the severity of toxic symptoms in aconite poisoning.