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2 result(s) for "Labay, Laura M."
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Synthetic cannabinoid drug use as a cause or contributory cause of death
•Synthetic cannabinoid use has been associated with lethal outcomes.•Pre-existing conditions may produce greater risk for a fatal case outcome.•Differences of opinion exist regarding cause and manner of death determination. Adverse effects associated with synthetic cannabinoid use include agitation, psychosis, seizures and cardiovascular effects, all which may result in a lethal outcome. We report the collection of data from 25 medical examiner and coroner cases where the presence of synthetic cannabinoids was analytically determined. Participating offices provided case history, investigative and relevant autopsy findings and toxicology results along with the cause and manner of death determination. This information, with the agency and cause and manner of death determinations blinded, was sent to participants. Participants offered their opinions regarding the likely contribution of the toxicology findings to cause and manner of death. The results show that some deaths are being attributed to synthetic cannabinoids, with the highest risk areas being behavioral toxicity resulting in excited delirium, trauma or accidents and as contributing factors in subjects with pre-existing cardiopulmonary disease. While insufficient information exists to correlate blood synthetic cannabinoid concentrations to effect, in the absence of other reasonable causes, the drugs should be considered as a cause or contributory cause of death based on history and circumstances with supporting toxicological data.
Poison hemlock determination in postmortem samples
Poison hemlock (Conium maculatum L.) is a weed that grows rampant in many areas of North America. Forensic toxicology laboratories rarely receive requests to analyze biological specimens for the presence of poison hemlock. This report discusses two postmortem cases that were encountered over a decade apart and describes different analytical approaches that may be used to quantify coniine, a primary poison hemlock alkaloid, in biological specimens. The first case is from 2004 and involves a 27-year-old female that was found deceased in a relatively isolated area of California. Based on the presence of plant material at the scene and signs of its ingestion at autopsy, the possibility of hemlock poisoning was considered. Toxicological testing of the blood and gastric content by quantitative selected-ion monitoring Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (SIM-GC/MS) revealed the presence of coniine at concentrations of 410 ng/mL and 9300 ng/mL, respectively. The second case is from Pennsylvania and was sent for analysis in the spring of 2019. In this case, a male in his forties was found deceased in the kitchen area of a camper. Green substances, in liquid and residue forms, were observed in the sink. Mixtures of leaf-like material were also found in several bowls and pans. Subclavian blood screened positive for coniine by full-scan Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS). Semi-quantitative confirmation testing was performed by Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and showed the presence of coniine at a concentration of 35 ng/mL. These analytical approaches can be used to substantiate or exclude poison hemlock exposure as a cause of death. •Poison hemlock toxicity is due to several piperidine alkaloids, including coniine.•Two case studies are presented where coniine was attributed to the cause of death.•GC/MS and LC-MS/MS methods were developed to quantitate coniine in blood.