Literature DB >> 20154283

Postmortem redistribution of fentanyl in blood.

Kalen N Olson1, Kristin Luckenbill, Jonathan Thompson, Owen Middleton, Roberta Geiselhart, Kelly M Mills, Julie Kloss, Fred S Apple.   

Abstract

Fentanyl concentrations were measured in postmortem specimens collected in 20 medical examiner cases from femoral blood (FB), heart blood (HB), heart tissue, liver tissue, and skeletal muscle. Unique was a subset of 7 cases in which FB was obtained at 2 postmortem intervals, shortly after death (FB1) and at autopsy (FB2). The mean collection times of FB1 and FB2 after death were 4.0 and 21.6 hours, respectively. Fentanyl concentrations for FB1 and FB2 ranged from undetectable to 14.6 microg/L (mean, 4.6 microg/L) and 2.0 to 52.5 microg/L (mean, 17.3 microg/L), respectively. Corresponding mean HB, liver tissue, and heart tissue fentanyl concentrations were 29.8 microg/L, 109.7 mg/kg, and 103.4 mg/kg, respectively. The fentanyl HB/FB1 ratio (mean, 8.39) was higher compared with the corresponding HB/FB2 ratio (mean, 3.48). These results suggest that postmortem redistribution of fentanyl can occur in FB.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20154283     DOI: 10.1309/AJCP4X5VHFSOERFT

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9173            Impact factor:   2.493


  10 in total

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2.  Antemortem and postmortem fentanyl concentrations: a case report.

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4.  The pitfalls of per se thresholds in accurately identifying acute cannabis intoxication at autopsy.

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6.  Reliability of postmortem fentanyl concentrations in determining the cause of death.

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8.  Evaluation of Acetylfentanyl Following Suspected Heroin Overdose When Complicated by the Presence of Toxic Fentanyl and Alprazolam Concentrations.

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Review 9.  Postmortem Toxicology of New Synthetic Opioids.

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  10 in total

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