Literature DB >> 30242469

Estimation of day of death using micro-segmental hair analysis based on drug use history: a case of lidocaine use as a marker.

Kenji Kuwayama1, Maika Nariai2, Hajime Miyaguchi3, Yuko T Iwata3, Tatsuyuki Kanamori3, Kenji Tsujikawa3, Tadashi Yamamuro3, Hiroki Segawa3, Hiroko Abe4, Hirotaro Iwase2,4, Hiroyuki Inoue3.   

Abstract

During investigations of unnatural death, the time of death is generally estimated using anatomical examinations. However, it can be difficult to accurately determine the day of death, because postmortem changes in the body tissues can be greatly affected by the circumstances of the location of the corpse. We recently developed a method to estimate the day of drug ingestion, using micro-segmental hair analysis based on internal temporal markers (ITMs). In this method, ITMs are ingested at a specific time interval before hair collection to mark timescales within individual hair strands. A single hair strand is segmented at 0.4-mm intervals, corresponding to average daily hair growth. The day of drug ingestion is eventually estimated by calculating the distances between segments containing the drug and ITMs in a hair strand. In the present study, the method was applied to estimate the day of death. A corpse was discovered with a documented medical history of lidocaine administration for surgery 57 days before the discovery. Micro-segmental analysis of a hair plucked from the corpse was performed using lidocaine as an ITM. Lidocaine was detected at specific regions in the hair strands. The day of death was estimated using the known surgery day, the distance from the hair root to the lidocaine peak in the hair strand, and the average hair growth rate. The novel estimation method using a hair enabled us to narrow the estimated time range of death up to the day of death, unlike the conventional anatomical examination. The micro-segmental hair analysis based on drug use history can be extremely helpful in determining the time of an unnatural death.

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Keywords:  Day of death; Drug; Hair; Lidocaine; Micro-segmental analysis

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30242469     DOI: 10.1007/s00414-018-1939-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Legal Med        ISSN: 0937-9827            Impact factor:   2.686


  1 in total

1.  Possibility of drug-distribution measurement in the hair of drowned bodies: evaluation of drug stability in water-soaked hair using micro-segmental analysis.

Authors:  Kenji Kuwayama; Hajime Miyaguchi; Tatsuyuki Kanamori; Kenji Tsujikawa; Tadashi Yamamuro; Hiroki Segawa; Yuki Okada; Yuko T Iwata
Journal:  Int J Legal Med       Date:  2022-10-15       Impact factor: 2.791

  1 in total

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