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Volume 194, Issue 1, Pages 60-66 (30 January 2010)


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Detection of acute fentanyl exposure in fresh and decomposed skeletal tissues part II: The effect of dose–death interval

Nelson M. Lafreniere, James H. WattersonCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 6 August 2009; received in revised form 20 September 2009; accepted 8 October 2009. published online 07 December 2009.

Abstract 

The effects of dose–death interval on the detection of acute fentanyl exposure in fresh and decomposed skeletal tissues (marrow and bone), by automated enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) are described. Rats (n=14) were administered fentanyl acutely at a dose of 0 (n=2) or 60μg/kg (n=12) by intraperitoneal injection, and euthanized within 20, 45, 135, or 225min. Femora and tibiae were extracted from the fresh corpses and marrow was isolated from the femoral and tibial medullary cavities. The remains were then allowed to decompose outdoors to the point of complete skeletonization, and vertebrae, pelvi and miscellaneous (humeri and scapulae) were recovered for analysis. In all cases, bones were cleaned in alkaline solution and then ground into a fine powder. Marrow was homogenized in alkaline solution. Fentanyl was extracted from ground bone by methanolic extraction. Extracts were adjusted to pH 6 and analyzed by ELISA. Perimortem heart blood was also collected and diluted in phosphate buffer prior to screening by ELISA. The effect of tissue type on ELISA response was examined through determination of binary classification test sensitivity and the relative decrease in absorbance (%DA, drug-positive tissues vs. drug-free controls) in each tissue type. Overall, the %DA varied significantly between extracts from different skeletal tissues at a given dose–death interval, according to the general order of marrow>decomposed bone>fresh bone. Binary classification test sensitivity values for fentanyl in marrow, fresh epiphyseal (femoral and tibial) bone, fresh diaphyseal (femoral and tibial) bone, decomposed vertebrae, decomposed pelvic bone, and decomposed miscellaneous bone were 67–100%, 0–33%, 0–33%, 0–67%, 0–67% and 0–33%, respectively, over all dose–death intervals. Although group mean %DA values showed a strong negative correlation with dose–death interval in marrow, fresh epiphyseal bone, decomposed vertebrae, pelvic and miscellaneous bone (r=−0.989, −0.930, −0.955, −0.903, and −0.974, respectively), the high variability in both fresh and decomposed bone precluded differentiation of the dose–death intervals based on %DA value alone. Overall, the results suggested that the type of skeletal tissue sampled may not be as important as the amount of residual marrow remaining in skeletonized remains.

Forensic Toxicology Research Laboratory, Department of Forensic Science, Laurentian University, 935 Ramsey Lake Rd., Sudbury, Ontario, Canada P3E 2C6

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 705 675 1151; fax: +1 705 671 6619.

PII: S0379-0738(09)00419-8

doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2009.10.008


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