7 - Forensics Overview Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of toxicology?

A

Analysis of body fluids and tissues for presence of drugs and poisons

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2
Q

3 areas of forensic toxicology

A
  1. Post-mortem forensic toxicology (cause and manner of death, analysis of body fluids and tissues)
  2. Human performance forensic toxicology (modifying human performance or behaviour, analysis of blood/ breath/ urine)
  3. Forensic drug testing (determine drug use, analysis of urine/ oral fluid/ sweat/ hair)
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3
Q

What questions must a forensic toxicologist be able to answer?

A
  • Was a drug/ poison found?
  • What was it?
  • How much was found?
  • Was the amount of poison/ drug sufficient to cause death (ex: murder, poisoning) or impairment (ex: impaired driver)?
  • When and how was the poison/ drug taken into the body?
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4
Q

What information is required to aid in the interpretation when a death has occurred?

A
  • Age, gender, weight
  • Time and date of death/ incident
  • Details of last meal; actions between meal and onset of sx
  • Was person treated in hospital? (if so, what drugs were given in hospital?)
  • Medication and drinking hx
  • Sx prior to death
  • Pathologist’s findings/ observations
  • Evidence found at the scene
  • Health of deceased (any prior medical conditions?)
  • Time delay between death and autopsy (post-mortem redistribution)
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5
Q

Describe post-mortem distribution. What is required for an accurate interpretation?

A
  • Involves the distribution of drugs from the heart tissue to the cardiac blood
  • Majority occurs in the first 24 h post-death
  • Cardiac blood levels may be significantly elevated (up to 10x)
  • Levels from 2 sites (femoral and cardiac) allow for more accurate interpretation
    • Use the cardiac sample for the screen; use femoral sample for quantification
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6
Q

What information is required to aid in the interpretation when the investigation involves a living person?

A
  • Age, gender, weight
  • Signs and sx of impairment or intoxication
  • Admission of drug and alcohol use
  • Evidence found at the scene or on the victim or accused
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7
Q

What type of sample is used for quantification?

A
  • Best = blood

- 2nd best = liver

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8
Q

What are the 3 types of blood samples?

A
  • Serum (no clotting factors)
  • Plasma (has clotting factors)
  • Whole blood (has cells)
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9
Q

___ is the most reliable sample for interpretation of alcohol and drug impairment

A

Blood

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10
Q

How do you preserve blood?

A

1% sodium fluoride

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11
Q

Advantages to urine

A
  • Non-invasive and convenient to collect
  • Little or no sample prep (don’t have to remove any cells or lipids from urine like you would w/ blood)
  • Drugs/ alcohol found in higher concentrations
  • Longer detection periods compared to blood
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12
Q

Disadvantages to urine

A
  • May not reflect level of impairment at time of incident
  • Some drugs break down in body, making identification more difficult
  • May be subject to adulteration or tampering
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13
Q

What is urine used for?

A
  • Identification purposes

- Exception -> can be used to estimate BAC if period over which urine was collected is known

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14
Q

Advantages to hair

A
  • Relatively non-invasive
  • Easy to collect
  • No special storage requirements
  • Useful in determining long-term drug use
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15
Q

Disadvantages to hair

A
  • Not useful for detection of alcohol
  • More costly than urinalysis
  • Environmental contamination may be an issue (so must wash the outside of the hair and only analyze what is inside the hair)
  • Potential for racial and hair colour bias (drugs incorporate into darker hair preferentially than lighter hair)
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16
Q

Describe the collection method of oral fluid/ saliva

A
  • Expectorating into a container or placing a cotton swab or gauze in the mouth and allowing the oral fluid to be absorbed over a period of time or until saturated
  • Stimulation of oral fluid may involve chewing on a piece of paraffin, rubber band or glass marble
17
Q

Advantages to oral fluid/ saliva

A
  • Non-invasive and easy to collect
  • No medical personnel required to collect samples
  • Drug detection times similar to blood
18
Q

Disadvantages to oral fluid/ saliva

A
  • Only parent drug detected
  • Requires sensitive analytical techniques
  • Limited data regarding interpretation of oral fluid levels
  • Recent smoking or oral consumption may complicate interpretation
19
Q

Advantages to sweat

A
  • Non-invasive and easy to collect
  • Patch impermeable to environmental contaminants
  • Each patch has unique ID #; tamperproof
20
Q

Disadvantages to sweat

A
  • Only parent drug detected
  • Costly
  • Requires sensitive methods for detection
  • Entire patch is consumed in analysis
  • Limited info regarding incorporation of drugs in sweat and significance of findings
21
Q

When are sweat samples generally used?

A

Breach of probation cases

22
Q

What samples can be collected from a deceased patient?

A
  • Blood, urine
    • Always get hemolyzed whole blood (hemolyzed = cells have burst)
    • Sometimes urine not available after death
  • Liver
  • Stomach contents
  • Bile
  • Vitreous humour
  • CSF
23
Q

____ is one of the most valuable tissues for post-mortem drug analysis

A

Liver

24
Q

When are stomach contents analyzed?

A

Where drug overdose by oral ingestion is suspected

25
Q

What does stomach contents measure?

A

Unabsorbed drug at the time of death

26
Q

What is bile used for?

A

Identification purposes only

27
Q

What can be identified in vitreous humour?

A

Alcohol (not drugs)

28
Q

Advantages to vitreous humour

A
  • Less subject to contamination and putrefaction
  • Limited quantity available
  • Clean sample
29
Q

What can be identified in CSF?

A

Alcohol (can be used as a double check for blood alcohol)

30
Q

What are some possible other samples not routinely taken?

A
  • Kidney, brain, lung tissue
  • Hair and fingernails
  • Bone, heart, adipose tissue
  • Sites of injection
31
Q

Heroin can be detected in ____ tissue

A

Brain

32
Q

Describe putrefaction

A
  • Starts to occur immediately
  • A time delay in bringing in exhibits may cause challenges w/ some analyses (ex: carbon monoxide, cocaine, alcohol, cyanide)
    • Enzymes in the blood continue to break down cocaine even after death
  • Freeze exhibits immediately if submission is going to be delayed