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Potential for error when assessing blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims.
J Forensic Sci. 2001 Nov; 46(6):1421-5.JF

Abstract

The present study explores toxicologic significance of blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims. Headspace gas chromatography was used for cyanide detection. Analysis of blood samples from ten fire victims (postmortem interval = 8 h to 3 to 5 d) detected zero to 11.9 mg/L of cyanide and a large difference in cyanide concentrations among victims. Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) saturation was in the range of 24.9 to 84.2%. To examine the effects of methemoglobinemia and postmortem interval on blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims, an experiment was carried out using rabbits as the animal model. The rabbits were sacrificed by intramuscular injection of 1 mL/kg 2% potassium cyanide 5 min after intravenous injection of 0.33 mL/kg of 3% sodium nitrite (Group A, n = 3) or physiological saline (Group B, n = 6). Average methemoglobin contents immediately before potassium cyanide administration were 6.9 and 0.8% in Groups A and B, respectively. Average cyanide concentrations in cardiac blood at the time of death were 47.4 and 3.56 mg/L, respectively. When blood-containing hearts of the rabbits (n = 3 for Group B) were left at 46 degrees C for the first 1 h, at 20 to 25 degrees C for the next 23 h and then at 4 degrees C for 48 h, approximately 85 and 46% of the original amounts of blood cyanide disappeared within 24 h in Groups A and B, respectively. After the 72-h storage period, 37 and 10%, respectively, of the original amounts of cyanide remained in the blood. When the other three hearts in Group B were left at 20 to 25 degrees C for the last 48 h without refrigeration, cyanide had disappeared almost completely by the end of the experiment. The present results and those published in the literature demonstrate that the toxic effects of cyanide on fire victims should not be evaluated based solely on the concentration in blood.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Legal Medicine, Kochi Medical School, Nankoku City, Japan.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11714154

Citation

Moriya, F, and Y Hashimoto. "Potential for Error when Assessing Blood Cyanide Concentrations in Fire Victims." Journal of Forensic Sciences, vol. 46, no. 6, 2001, pp. 1421-5.
Moriya F, Hashimoto Y. Potential for error when assessing blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims. J Forensic Sci. 2001;46(6):1421-5.
Moriya, F., & Hashimoto, Y. (2001). Potential for error when assessing blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 46(6), 1421-5.
Moriya F, Hashimoto Y. Potential for Error when Assessing Blood Cyanide Concentrations in Fire Victims. J Forensic Sci. 2001;46(6):1421-5. PubMed PMID: 11714154.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Potential for error when assessing blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims. AU - Moriya,F, AU - Hashimoto,Y, PY - 2001/11/21/pubmed PY - 2002/1/5/medline PY - 2001/11/21/entrez SP - 1421 EP - 5 JF - Journal of forensic sciences JO - J Forensic Sci VL - 46 IS - 6 N2 - The present study explores toxicologic significance of blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims. Headspace gas chromatography was used for cyanide detection. Analysis of blood samples from ten fire victims (postmortem interval = 8 h to 3 to 5 d) detected zero to 11.9 mg/L of cyanide and a large difference in cyanide concentrations among victims. Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) saturation was in the range of 24.9 to 84.2%. To examine the effects of methemoglobinemia and postmortem interval on blood cyanide concentrations in fire victims, an experiment was carried out using rabbits as the animal model. The rabbits were sacrificed by intramuscular injection of 1 mL/kg 2% potassium cyanide 5 min after intravenous injection of 0.33 mL/kg of 3% sodium nitrite (Group A, n = 3) or physiological saline (Group B, n = 6). Average methemoglobin contents immediately before potassium cyanide administration were 6.9 and 0.8% in Groups A and B, respectively. Average cyanide concentrations in cardiac blood at the time of death were 47.4 and 3.56 mg/L, respectively. When blood-containing hearts of the rabbits (n = 3 for Group B) were left at 46 degrees C for the first 1 h, at 20 to 25 degrees C for the next 23 h and then at 4 degrees C for 48 h, approximately 85 and 46% of the original amounts of blood cyanide disappeared within 24 h in Groups A and B, respectively. After the 72-h storage period, 37 and 10%, respectively, of the original amounts of cyanide remained in the blood. When the other three hearts in Group B were left at 20 to 25 degrees C for the last 48 h without refrigeration, cyanide had disappeared almost completely by the end of the experiment. The present results and those published in the literature demonstrate that the toxic effects of cyanide on fire victims should not be evaluated based solely on the concentration in blood. SN - 0022-1198 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11714154/Potential_for_error_when_assessing_blood_cyanide_concentrations_in_fire_victims_ L2 - https://www.lens.org/lens/search/patent/list?q=citation_id:11714154 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -