1. Two Fatal Intoxications Involving Butyryl Fentanyl.
- Author
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Poklis J, Poklis A, Wolf C, Hathaway C, Arbefeville E, Chrostowski L, Devers K, Hair L, Mainland M, Merves M, and Pearson J
- Subjects
- Analgesics, Opioid poisoning, Autopsy, Designer Drugs analysis, Drug Overdose blood, Female, Fentanyl poisoning, Forensic Toxicology methods, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Humans, Limit of Detection, Liver drug effects, Liver metabolism, Middle Aged, Oxycodone blood, Oxycodone poisoning, Reproducibility of Results, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Analgesics, Opioid blood, Drug Overdose mortality, Fentanyl blood
- Abstract
We present the case histories, autopsy findings and toxicology findings of two fatal intoxications involving the designer drug, butyryl fentanyl. The quantitative analysis of butyryl fentanyl in postmortem fluids and tissues was performed by an ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry method. In the first case, butyryl fentanyl was the only drug detected with concentrations of 99 ng/mL in peripheral blood, 220 ng/mL in heart blood, 32 ng/mL in vitreous humor, 590 ng/mL in gastric contents, 93 ng/g in brain, 41 ng/g in liver, 260 ng/mL in bile and 64 ng/mL in urine. The cause of death was ruled fatal intoxication by butyryl fentanyl. In the second case, butyryl fentanyl was detected along with acetyl fentanyl, alprazolam and ethanol. The butyryl fentanyl concentrations were 3.7 ng/mL in peripheral blood, 9.2 ng/mL in heart blood, 9.8 ng/mL in vitreous humor, 4,000 ng/mL in gastric contents, 63 ng/g in brain, 39 ng/g in liver, 49 ng/mL in bile and 2 ng/mL in urine. The acetyl fentanyl concentrations were 21 ng/mL in peripheral blood, 95 ng/mL in heart blood, 68 ng/mL in vitreous humor, 28,000 ng/mL in gastric contents, 200 ng/g in brain, 160 ng/g in liver, 330 ng/mL in bile and 8 ng/mL in urine. In addition, the alprazolam concentration was 40 ng/mL and the ethanol concentration was 0.11 g/dL, both measured in peripheral blood. The cause of death in the second case was ruled a mixed drug intoxication. In both cases, the manner of death was accident., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
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