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Journal Article

Citation

Hasegawa K, Wurita A, Nozawa H, Yamagishi I, Minakata K, Watanabe K, Suzuki O. Forensic Sci. Int. 2018; 290: 111-120.

Affiliation

Department of Legal Medicine, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, 1-20-1 Handayama, Higashi-ku, Hamamatsu 431-3192, Japan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.forsciint.2018.06.044

PMID

30015275

Abstract

We experienced a curious fatal case, in which a male in his 20s self-administered zolpidem intravenously. The victim was found dead lying on floor of his apartment room, with a tourniquet band and new injection marks on his right forearm. Nearby the body, a medical disposal syringe containing small-volume solution dissolving crushed zolpidem tablets was found. The postmortem interval was estimated at about two days. The direct cause of his death was judged as asphyxia due to the aspiration of stomach contents into the trachea and bronchi. The specimens dealt with were body fluids and solid tissues including femoral vein blood, right and left heart blood, pericardial fluid, urine, bile, stomach contents, the brain, lung, heart muscle, liver, spleen, kidney, pancreas and skeletal muscle. For the extractions of zolpidem, zolpidem phenyl-4-carboxylic acid, deuterated internal standards zolpidem-d7 and zolpidem phenyl-4-carboxylic acid-d4, a modified QuEChERS method was used, followed by the analysis by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Because this study included various kinds of human matrices with quite different properties, the standard addition method was most preferable to overcome the matrix effects and recovery rates, and also did not need to use blank human matrices for validation experiments. The concentration of zolpidem and its phenyl-4-carboxylic acid metabolite in various specimens tested were generally extreme higher than those of reported fatal cases, supporting that the victim had died of intravenous zolpidem injection. The concentrations of zolpidem in femoral vein blood and right and left heart blood specimens in the present case were 9.55, 28.5 and 46.9μg/mL, respectively, which far exceeded estimated fatal levels. The present study also showed the postmortem distribution/redistribution of zolpidem and its phenyl-4-carboxylic acid metabolite in 15 body fluid and solid tissue specimens including stomach contents. Although a number of published literatures dealt with zolpidem poisoning cases due to oral ingestion of the drug, this is the first report on fatal intravenous zolpidem injection case and postmortem distribution of zolpidem and its predominant metabolite.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Intravenous injection; LC–MS–MS; Postmortem distribution/redistribution; QuEChERS method; Zolpidem; Zolpidem phenyl-4-carboxylic acid

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