Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and...

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Forensic Toxicology

description

Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs

Transcript of Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and...

Page 1: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Forensic Toxicology

Page 2: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.
Page 3: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Definition• The science of detecting and

identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs

Page 4: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Controlled Substances Act

Federal Law established 5 schedules of classification of controlled substances based on: • Drug’s potential for abuse• Potential for physical and psychological dependence• Medical valueNote: Federal law also controls materials that are used in making drugs that are manufactured to resemble drugs

Page 5: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Drug Schedules

• Schedule I: Drugs with high potential for abuse and addiction, no medical value (i.e.: heroin, LSD, Ecstasy, Marijuana)

• Schedule II: Drugs with high potential for abuse and addiction, have some medical value with restrictions (i.e.: PCP, cocaine, amphetamines, most opiates, some barbiturates)

Page 6: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Drug Schedules

• Schedule III: Drugs with less potential for abuse and addiction, currently acceptable for medical use (i.e.: Some barbiturates, codeine, steroids)

• Schedule IV: Drugs with low potential for abuse and addiction, currently acceptable for medical use (i.e.: tranquilizers like valium, Xanax, Librium)

• Schedule V: Drugs with lowest potential for abuse, currently acceptable for medical use use, lowest potential dependency (i.e.: some opiates with non-narcotic ingredients)

Page 7: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Role of the Toxicologist

• Must identify one of thousands of drugs and poisons

• Must find nanogram to microgram quantities dissipated throughout the entire body

• Not always looking for exact chemicals , but metabolites for desired chemicals)

Page 8: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Toxicology Procedures

Screening: • quick test to narrow down the procedures• color tests, TLC (thin layer chromatography), GC,

immunoassayConfirmation: • Determines the exacy identity• GC?Mass Spec

Page 9: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Color Tests

Marquis Test• Turns purple in presence of heroin, morphine, opium • Turns orange brown in the presence of amphetaminesCobalt Thiocyanate Test (AKA Scott Test) • Three solutions• Blue then pink, then blue in the presence of cocaineDuquenois-Levine:• Test for Marijuana- turns purple

Page 10: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Analytical Tests

Microcrystalline Tests• Identifies drug by using chemicals that react to produce

characteristic crystals Chromatography• (TLC)Thin Layer Chromatography• (HPLC)High Performance Liquid Chromatography• Gas Chromatography

• Separate drugs for tentative identificationMass Spectrometry• Chemical fingerprint, not two drugs fragment the same way

Page 11: Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.

Why?

• Think of all the people that you have heard of the “do” drugs

• US drug manufacturers produce enough barbiturates and tranquilizers each year to give each person in the US 40 pills (about 12 billion pills)

• 18,000-44,000 annual traffic deaths are alcohol related and over 2 million people sent to the hospital because of such an accident