1. Lethal Injection of a Castor Bean Extract: Ricinine Quantification as a Marker for Ricin Exposure Using a Validated LC–MS/MS Method
- Author
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Dries Helsloot, Christa Deprez, Olivier Heylen, Isabelle Casier, Nick Verougstraete, and Kathleen Croes
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Resuscitation ,Critical Care ,Pyridones ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Fulminant ,Poison control ,Suicide, Attempted ,Urine ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,01 natural sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Alkaloids ,Fatal Outcome ,0302 clinical medicine ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Lethal Injection ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Medicine ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,Chemical Health and Safety ,biology ,Plant Extracts ,Ricinus ,business.industry ,Poisoning ,Alkaloid ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Reproducibility of Results ,biology.organism_classification ,0104 chemical sciences ,Ricin ,chemistry ,Injections, Intravenous ,business ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Ricin is a highly toxic agent derived from the castor bean plant (Ricinus communis). Poisoning occurs commonly by oral ingestion of the beans. Injection of ricin is believed to be more lethal. Ricin is a large glycosylated protein difficult to detect in clinical samples. Instead, ricinine, a small alkaloid found in the same beans, is used as surrogate marker for ricin exposure. We describe a simple LC-MS/MS method for the detection of ricinine in serum, blood and urine, validated according to EMA guidelines and successfully applied to patient samples of a suicidal death after injection of a castor bean extract. A 26-year-old man self-presented to the emergency department with severe abdominal cramps and nausea after injection of a castor bean extract. Due to rapid deterioration of his hemodynamic function despite early aggressive fluid resuscitation, he was transferred to ICU. Abdominal cramps worsened and a fulminant diarrhea developed, resulting in hypovolemic shock and cardiorespiratory collapse. Despite full supportive therapy, the patient died approximately 10 hours after injection due to multiple organ failure. Ricinine was quantified by LC-MS/MS after LLE with diethyl ether using ricinine-D3 as internal standard. Six hours after injection, ricinine concentrations in serum and blood were 16.5 and 12.9 ng/mL, respectively, which decreased to 12.4 and 10.6 ng/mL, 4 hours later. The urinary concentration was 81.1 ng/mL 7 hours after injection, which amply exceeded the levels previously reported in similar cases with lethal outcome. Concentrations of ricinine, compatible with a lethal exposure to castor beans, were detected in serum, blood and urine. Ricinine was also found in bile and liver tissue.
- Published
- 2018