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Drug Identification and Toxicology

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Title: Drug Identification and Toxicology


1
Drug Identification and Toxicology

Chapter 9
2
Introduction
  • Toxicology the study of poisons and the
    identification of drugs and other substances a
    person may have used for medicinal, recreational,
    or criminal purposes. Toxicology also examines
    the harmful effects of poisons and drugs on the
    body.
  • Toxicity degree to which a substance is
    poisonous or can cause injury. This depends on
    many factors
  • Dose
  • Duration (frequency and length of exposure)
  • Nature of exposure (ingested, inhaled,
    intravenously, from dermal contact)
  • Interactions with other substances or medications
    already present
  • Forensic toxicology helps determine the
    cause-and-effect relationships between exposure
    to a drug or other substance and the toxic or
    lethal effects from that exposure. Besides
    drugs, this includes heavy metals, solvents and
    vapors, radiation and radioactive materials,
    dioxins/furans, pesticides, and plant and animal
    toxins

3
History
  • Toxins are classified by how people are exposed
    to them
  • Intentionally drugs to treat an illness
  • Accidently overdoses or harmful combinations
  • Deliberately suicide or to harm or kill others
  • Sophocles was the earliest reported victim of
    poisoning (399 BC) By the 17th century,
    poisoning had become a profession, especially
    arsenic (nicknamed inheritance powder). It was
    until the 1800s when a chemical analysis to test
    for arsenic poisoning had been developed.

4
Murder By Poison
  • Although popular in murder mysteries, its not a
    common form of murder. Only about 0.5 of all
    homicides are from poisoning.
  • Testing for a vast array of possible toxins can
    be a challenge to the toxicologist. They must
    determine from acute poisoning (high dose over a
    short period of time like cyanide) and chronic
    poisoning (lower doses over long periods of time,
    like mercury and lead)
  • Accidental deaths from drug overdoses are more
    common than deaths from poisoning.

5
Drugs and Crime
  • Illegal drugs like heroin and lysergic acid
    diethlaminde (LSD) are drugs with currently no
    accepted medical use in the US.
  • Controlled substances are defined as legal drugs
    whose sale, possession, and use are restricted bc
    of the effect of the drugs and potential for
    abuse (narcotics, depressants, stimulants)
  • Drug abuse violations topped the list of the
    seven leading arrest offenses in the US in 2005.
    Drug offenders make up more than half of the
    federal prison system population and about 20 of
    the state prison population.

6
Controlled Substances
  • Hallucinogens
  • From plants, and affect the users perceptions,
    thinking, self-awareness, and emotions. These
    include peyote, marijuana, and some mushrooms.
    LSD, MDMA (ecstasy), and PCP (angel dust), are
    chemically manufactured
  • LSD originally was a fungus that grows on rye and
    is one of the more potent mood-changing chemicals
  • PCP was developed as an anesthetic, but is no
    longer used.

DRUG CHARACTERISTICS OF OVERDOSE
MDMA (ecstasy) Increased heart rate and BP, muscle cramps, panic attacks, seizures, loss of consciousness, stroke, kidney failure, death
Mescaline (peyote) Hallucinations, euphoria, dizziness, vomiting, up heart rate, dilated pupils, diarrhea, headaches, anxiety and irrationality
LSD Dialated pupils, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, high temp, high heart rate and BP, sweating, dry mouth, tremors, confusion, distortion, hallucinations
PCP High heart rate and BP, convulsions, sweating, dizziness, numbness, heart failure (death), drowsiness, psychosis that can last weeks.
7
  • Narcotics
  • Act to reduce pain by suppressing the central
    nervous system. Like opium and its derivatives
    heroin and codeine. These painkillers are very
    habit forming

DRUG CHARACTERISTICS OF OVERDOSE
Opium Difficulty breathing, low BP, weakness, dizziness, confusion, loss of consciousness, cold clammy skin, small pupils.
Heroin, codeine, morphine (hydrocodone, vicodin, lortab, tylenol 3) Difficulty breathing, low BP, coma, spasms of the stomach or intestines, constipation, nausea, vomiting, sleepiness, blue fingernails and lips, death
Methadone (dolophine), morphine Difficulty breathing, drowsiness, coma, low BP, muscle twitches, blue fingernails and lips
Oxycodone (percocet, oxycontin) Slow, difficult breathing, seizures, coma, confusion, tiredness, cold clammy skin, small pupils
8
  • Stimulants
  • Increase feelings of energy and alertness while
    suppressing appetite. Depression often results
    as the effect of the drug wears off.
    Amphetamines, methamphetamines, and cocaine
    (including crack) are highly addictive

DRUG CHARACTERISTICS OF OVERDOSE
Amphetamines (speed) High BP, rapid heart rate, agitation, irregular heartbeats, stroke, seizure, coma, death
Cocaine/crack cocaine Dangerous rise in body temp, sweating, tremors, seizures, irregular heartbeats, stroke, confusion, heart attack, bleeding in the brain, death
Methamphetamines Dangerous rise in body temp, profuse sweating, confusion, rapid breathing, high heart rate, dilated pupils, high BP, kidney failure, bleeding in the brain, death
9
  • Anabolic steroids
  • Promote cell and tissue growth and division,
    similar to testosterone. Created to treat
    hypogonadism (low testosterone levels in males)
    and are used for many reasons in medicine. In
    1930s, weightlifters and body builders discovered
    their potential, but had side effects, like acne,
    baldness, high BP, impaired fertility, cancer,
    and heart attacks.
  • Depressants
  • Drugs like barbiturates and benzodiazepines that
    relieve anxiety and produce sleep. They reduce
    body functions, such as heart rate, by acting on
    the central nervous system and increasing the
    neurotransmitter called GABA which makes the user
    very calm. Side effects include slurred speech,
    loss of cordination, and intoxication similar to
    that of alcohol. OD-ing can cause coma or death.

10
Other Organic Toxins and Alcohols
  • Organic toxins poisonous substances produced by
    living organisms, usually proteins that cannot be
    broken down by another organism. Snake venom and
    bee stings are good examples (most are dermal or
    ingested)
  • ALL ALCOHOLS ARE TOXIC TO THE BODY. Methanol is
    not directly poisonous but the liver converts it
    to formaldehyde. Ethanol (grain alcohol) is
    produced by fermentation of sugars in fruits,
    grains, and veggies. The body converts ethanol
    to acetaldehyde and then acetic acid. To much
    acetaldehyde can accumulate in the blood and may
    produce dehydration, and classic symptoms of a
    hangover. Sometimes, the consumer will pass out
    and not wake back up.

11
Bacterial Toxins
  • Botulism is the most poisonous substance known to
    humans. Produced by the bacterium Clostridium
    botulinum and acts as a neurotoxin, paralyzing
    muscles by blocking the release of the
    neurotransmitter acetylecholin.
  • This toxin is extremely deadly in very small
    amounts. The toxin may be ingested from
    contaminated food, like canned veggies, cured
    pork, smoked or raw fish, and honey or corn
    syrup.
  • This bacterium can be killed by heating up food
    at 176 degrees Fahrenheit (at least) for 10
    minutes. Purified botulinum toxin (botox) has
    been safely used in medicine to treat several
    ailments.
  • Clostriduium tetani is the bacteria that produces
    tetanus, a potentially deadly nervous system
    disease (often called lockjaw because symptoms
    start in the jaw). It blocks nerve signals from
    the spinal cord from reaching the muscles and
    causes spasms so severe, bones can break and
    muscles can tear. 1 million deaths per year, 5
    per year in the US.

12
Heavy Metals and Pesticides
  • Pesticides were created for the control of
    insects, mice, fungi, bacteria, weeds, etc. and
    are by definition toxic and can cause severe
    illness and death.
  • Metal compounds like arsenic, lead, and mercury
    are very poisonous and have also been used for
    suicide and homicide. Can be introduced to the
    body by ingestion, inhalation, or absorbtion
    through the skin. They are stored in the soft
    tissues of the body.
  • Other lethal agents include gases like hydrogen
    cyanide (Hitlers gas chambers), carbon monoxide,
    and potassium chloride (stop production of ATP
    needed for cellular function) or sodium pentothal
    (lethal injections stops the heart from being
    able to create electrical impulses)

13

DRUG CHARACTERISITCS OF OVERDOSE
Pesticides Phosphate-containing pesticides that accumulate in fatty tissue leading to an excess of acetylcholine causing nerve impulses, twitching, seizures, sweating, diarrhea, coma, and death.
Lead Nausea, abdominal paoin, insomnia, headache, weight loss, constipation, anemia, kidney problem, vomiting, seizure, coma and death. Blue discoloration appears along the gumline in the mouth.
Mercury Mad Hatters Disease is a progressive disorder as mercury is absorbed and accumulates. Causes flu-like symptoms. Chronic poisoning causes irritability, personality changes, headache, memory and balance problems, ab pain, nausea, salivation and damage to the mouth.
Arsenic Within 30 min, ab pain, severe nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, dry throat, difficulty speaking, cramps, convulsion. Chronic exposure produces skin leasions and pigment changes.
Cyanide OD can be fatal in 6-8 min. Rapidly causes weakness, confusion, coma, and pink skin from high blood oxygen saturation. Produces and almond like odor.
14
Bioterrorism Agents
  • Ricin component of waste product of the
    manufacture of castor oil. Lethal in quantities
    as small as 500 mg (size of a pin head). Can be
    inhaled as a mist or powder, ingested as food or
    drink, or injected. Stops cells from creating
    proteins causing cell death. Large amounts of
    cells die, you die.
  • Anthrax Bacillus anthracis that forms
    endospores. Infected animals can transfer to
    human, but no known cases of human to human
    contamination. Can enter the body by inhalation,
    ingestion, or skin absorption.
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