Title: Drugs, Poisons and Forensic Toxicology
1Drugs, Poisons and Forensic Toxicology
- Read intro to ch.9 on Anna Nicole Smiths Death
2History of Toxicology
- Paracelsus (1493-1541)
- Devised the dose-response relationship between
therapeutic and toxic levels of drugs - Orfila (1787-1853)
- Contributed to the development of forensic
toxicology and the study of poisoning in criminal
actions
33 main categories of work for a forensic
toxicologist
- identification of drugs such as heroin, cocaine,
cannabis - detection of drugs and poisons in body fluids,
tissues, and organs - measuring of alcohol in blood or urine samples
4Toxic substances are classified by how people are
exposed to them
- Intentionally as in drugs taken to treat an
illness or relieve pain - Accidentally ingested/exposed, as in
unintentional overdose due to harmful
combinations of meds. - Deliberately as in suicide or exposure intended
to harm or kill others
5Anions
- Anions are negatively charged ions
- The most important of these is cyanide (CN-)
- Cyanide blocks proteins in the mitochondria
affecting metabolism lactic acid builds up
causing lactic acidosis - The brain's high metabolic rate accounts for its
disproportionate vulnerability to cyanide. - No matter how cyanide gets into your body, it
works the same way. In addition to inhaling
cyanide gas, it can be swallowed or absorbed
through your skin. - Symptoms
- Rapid (fast) breathing.
- Dizziness.
- Weakness.
- Headache.
- Nausea and vomiting.
- Rapid heartbeat.
6Corrosive Poisons
- Cause destruction of body tissues upon contact
- Severity depends on concentration and length of
contact time - If ingested, corrodes digestive tissues and may
perforate the gut - Less commonly used as poisons since they are easy
to detect - Examples HCl, HNO3, H2SO4 and KOH and NaOH
7Gaseous and Volatile Poisons
- These are substances that turn into the gas form
easily at room temperature to produce toxic
vapors - Most common of these is carbon monoxide
generally formed from the burning of fossil fuels - CO binds more strongly to hemoglobin than O2 does
- Victims therefore asphyxiate
- Deaths may be accidental (e.g. faulty gas
furnaces or smoke inhalation in fires) or
intentional (e.g. suicides from gas exhaust) - In accidental deaths, victims are unaware they
are being poisoned since CO is colorless and
odorless - Victims become sleepy due to lack of O2 to the
brain and lose consciousness - When CO binds to hemoglobin, it turns it cherry
red so bright red skin is a sign of CO poisoning
8Metalloid Poisons
- Metalloids (elements which are intermediates of
metals and nonmetals in terms of malleability,
ductility, conductivity and luster) include
arsenic (As) and antimony (Sb) - Interferes with cellular respiration
- Once a popular poison because it could be added
to food and resulted in symptoms similar to
dysentery and cholera now is less common since
traces remain in the hair, nails and bones well
after death - Napoleon was thought to be poisoned with arsenic
by his British captors later found to be
baseless claims - Accidental ingestion still happens since arsenic
is found in weedkillers and insecticides
9Metal Poisons
- Metals such as mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), lithium
(Li) and thallium (Tl) are also toxic some,
like mercury, in fairly low doses - They create symptoms similar to metalloid poisons
- Sometimes ingested without knowing it in low
doses which may accumulate over time (e.g.
mercury dumped into water bodies accumulates in
fish which we eat)
10Pesticides
- Pesticides are substances used to kill pest
organisms (fungicides, herbicides, insecticides) - How they act on humans varies because of their
differing target organisms (e.g. a herbicide
works differently than an insecticide) but may
cause vomiting, paralysis and/or convulsions - Many insect and mammalian poisons are
particularly dangerous because they are not host
specific and are designed specifically to kill a
wide range of organisms - Because of their widespread agricultural use as
well as availability to consumers, accidental
exposure by direct exposure to the pesticide is
not uncommon - Pesticides have also been used as poisons
deliberately or as a means of suicide
11Toxins
- Toxins are poisonous substances produced by an
organism (plant, animal, fungus or microorganism) - Natural toxins are a very diverse group both in
terms of how they work and in their chemistry - May be medicinal, toxic or even recreational
- One important group is the alkaloids (containing
nitrogen bases)
12A few alkaloid examples
- Atropine (deadly nightshade)
- Atropine blocks nerve cell transmission in the
parasympathetic nervous system (the PSN slows the
heartbeat and speeds up digestion) - Symptoms, therefore, include increased heart
rate, dilated pupils, and difficulty breathing
13A few alkaloid examples
- Strychnine (poison berry)
- Strychnine prevents the proper operation of the
chemical that controls nerve signals to the
muscles - The chemical controlling nerve signals works like
the bodys off switch for muscles - When this off switch does not work correctly,
muscles throughout the body have severe, painful
spasms. Even though the persons consciousness or
thinking are not affected at first (except that
the person is very excitable and in pain),
eventually the muscles tire and the person cant
breathe. - This is allegedly one of the most painful deaths
imaginable as every muscle in your body contracts
14Brown Recluse-venom causes death of soft tissue
that may take months to heal and can leave large,
deep scars
15Brown recluse bite
16Controlled Substances
- A drug is a natural or synthetic substance used
to produce a psychological or physiological
effect - Today, approximately 23 million people in the US
are illicit drug users - More than 75 of the evidence evaluated by crime
labs are drug related
17Drug Dependence
- Drug dependence varies based on the nature of the
drug, the route of administration, the dose, the
frequency of use and the individuals rate of
metabolism - Psychological needs arise from numerous personal
social factors that stem from the individuals
desire to create a sense of well-being to
escape from reality. - Certain drugs, when taken in sufficient dose and
frequency, are capable of producing physiological
changes that encourage their continued use
(withdrawal sickness body chills, vomiting,
stomach cramps, convulsions, insomnia, pain
hallucinations)
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19Categories of Drugs Based on Their Effects on the
Central Nervous System
- Stimulants stimulates brain activity
(amphetamines, cocaine, methamphetamines) - Depressants Inhibits brain activity (Alcohol,
barbiturates, heroin, GHB, Rohypnol, huffing) - Hallucinogens alterations in perception and mood
without affecting brain activity (Ecstasy, LSD,
PCP, cannabis) - Narcotics reduce pain by suppressing central
nervous system (opiates, heroin, codeine,
methadone, oxycodone)
20Stimulants Amphetamine
- AMPHETAMINES-synthetic drugs that stimulate
nervous system- uppers or speed - once stimulant wears off, depression may set in.
- Were once used in diet pills since it suppresses
appetites also increases heart rate, blood
pressure and temperature
21Cocaine
- Derived from the coca plant grown in the Andes
mountains of South America and tropical Asia. - Cocaine has had historical medical use as local
painkiller or anesthetic - Cocaine is a powerfully addictive stimulant drug.
The powdered, hydrochloride salt form of cocaine
can be snorted or dissolved in water and
injected. - Crack is freebase cocaine and is smoked inhaling
the vapor gets a larger dose of the drug to the
bran in less than 15 sec.
22Crack cocaine
- This form of cocaine comes in a rock crystal that
can be heated and its vapors smoked. The term
"crack" refers to the crackling sound heard when
it is heated. - The feeling of euphoria that crack provides fades
quickly and leaves the user feeling anxious,
depressed and pleasureless. - Only a small percentage of crack abusers will
ever be cured of this drug habit - Cocaine-related deaths result of cardiac related
seizures followed by respiratory arrest.
23Methamphetamine
- Produces intense rush or flash followed by
pleasure. - Smokeable form of Meth is Ice
- Repeated use of amphetamines leads to strong
psychological dependency - Methamphetamine is also produced in clandestine
drug labs (a big problem in the Pacific
northwest) - Chronic users exhibit violent destructive
behavior and acute psychosis, similar to paranoid
schizophrenia.
24DEPRESSANTS- slow down the central nervous system
- ALCOHOL tends to inhibit the mental processes of
judgment, memory, and concentration in low
doses. - In 2000, the federal government established 0.08
as the legal blood-alcohol limit. France,
Germany, Ireland, Australia and Japan set 0.05
Sweden is 0.02. - A person with 0.08 level is four times more
likely to become involved in an car accident as a
sober person at 0.15 you are 25 times more
likely.
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26Hallucinogens Marijuana
- MARIJUANA has been used legally and illegally for
3000 yrs- references to it in medical and
pharmacological uses. - Was used for
- painkiller,
- mild sedative,
- weakness,
- malaria,
- constipation,
- gout, etc.
- 1964- scientists isolated chemical substance
largely responsible for the hallucinogenic
properties of marijuana tetra hydro cannabinol
(THC) - THC content varies in parts of the plant- resin,
flowers, leaves. - Marijuana has been authorized for use in medical
profession - Reduction of excessive eye pressure in glaucoma
- Lessoning of nausea by anti-cancer drugs.
- Muscle relaxer and to increase appetite
27LSD PCP
- Lysergic acid diethylamide, a synthesized form of
lysergic acid - Substance derived from ergot
- Drug is very potent, as little as 25 micrograms
is enough to start visual hallucination - Physical dependence does not develop with
continued use, but the user may be prone to
flashbacks and psychotic reactions even after us
is discontinued. - PCP is often mixed with other drugs, LSD or
amphetemines. - It initially causes the user to feel stronger,
invulnerable and detached from reality. Users
soon become unresponsive, confused and agitated. - Long-term daily use can cause severe depression,
tendencies toward violence, and suicide.
28Narcotics Morphine/Heroin
- Morphine is extracted from opium (opiates)
- Has medicinal uses as a pain reliever
(analgesic). Regular use leads to physical
dependence. - Most addicts prefer a derivative of morphine
heroin. - Heroin has high solubility rate in water- easy
street preparation for intravenous administration
for injection. - Process is accelerated by heating in spoon, drawn
into a syringe or eyedropper for injection. - CODEINE is also present in opium- prepared
synthetically from morphine- used as cough
suppressant. - METHADONE- synthetic opiate- used for treatment
of heroin addicts- similar drug but less side
effects in withdrawal. - OXYCONTIN-synthetic opiate-used as a painkiller.
Doctors write close to 7 million prescriptions
for oxycontin annually it is estimated that
close to ¼ million people abuse this drug.
29Heroin
- Once heroin is produced it may reduced to powder
form - Heroin is highly soluble in water
- This makes street preparation for intravenous
administration rather simple - In the 1960s and 70s, the average bag of heroin
sold contained 15-20 heroin. Currently the
average purity is 35.
30Drug Identification
- So far we have only looked at a small number of
drugs there are many more, often mixtures of
different drugs a forensic chemist may analyze - These contain active drug ingredients of unknown
origin and identity as well as additives- sugar,
starch, quinine to dilute potency. - Forensic chemist or toxicologist can expect any
number of known and unknown substances submitted
for analysis - this problem makes it difficult for running
tests since multiple tests may be necessary for
unknown substance - Two types of tests are performed qualitative
(presence/absence) and quantitative (amounts)
31Drug Identification
- There are 2 general types of tests qualitative
and instrumental - Qualitative tests such as presumptive, TLC and
microcrystalline are fast, easy, relatively
cheap, but are qualitative and may be influenced
by other chemicals or drugs in the sample - Instrumental tests are expensive, time consuming,
but are more definitive and less influenced by
contaminants
32Presumptive (Color Tests)
- COLOR TESTS many drug tests yield characteristics
of color when brought into contact with chemical
reagents. - Color tests are used as screening tests and not
conclusive. - Impurities may affect the test
332 Primary Color Test Reagents
- Marquis (2 formaldehyde in sulfuric acid)
- Reagent turns purple in the presence of heroine
and morphine and most opium derivatives - Will become orange-brown when mixed with
methamphetamine
Heroin
Meth
342 Primary Color Test Reagents
- Scott Test (A2 cobalt thiocyanate dissolved in
water and glycerin, B concentrated hydrochloric
acid C chloroform) - A powder containing cocaine will turn solution A
blue, addition of B will result in a clear pink
color, then addition of C the blue color will
reappear in the chloroform layer
35Microcrystalline Tests
Cocaine
- MICROCRYSTALLINE TEST- drop of chemical reagent
is added to small quantity of the drug - A chemical reaction ensues producing crystals
- measure size and shape of crystals
- characteristic patterns for known drugs.
- This technique is considerably more specific than
color tests - Hundreds of crystalline tests have been developed
to identify the most commonly used drugs
Methamphetamine
36Chromatography
- The techniques of thin layer and gas
chromatography are especially well designed for
drug analysis. - Since the chromatograph or retention times must
be compared the analysis must have some idea of
what to compare the unknown too - Thus chromatography is a good follow up for
either color or microcrystalline tests
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38Bioterrorism Agents
- Ricin is lethal in humans in quantities as small
as 500 micrograms-size of the head of a pin - It can be inhaled as a powder, ingested in
food/drink, or injected into the skin. - Anthrax is caused by a bacteria that forms
spores. - It can be inhaled, ingested, or absorbed through
the skin