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

37
Forensic Toxicology

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.

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.

Controlled Substances Act

• Federal Law established 5 schedules of classification of controlled substances based on– Drug’s potential for abuse– Potential to physical and

psychological dependence– Medical Value

• Note: Federal law also controls materials that are used in making drugs and those that are manufactured to resemble drugs

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

Prison sentences in US

• Highest in world

• 750 out of 100,00 people

• 70% are drug abuse cases

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 valueEx: Heroin, LSD, Ecstasy, Marijuana

• Schedule II: • Drugs with high potential for abuse and

addiction, have some medical value with restrictionsEx: Cocaine, Amphetamines

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 useEx: Codeine, Steroids

• Schedule IV: • Drugs with low potential for abuse and

addiction, currently acceptable for medical useEx: Tranquilizers like Valium

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

Drug Schedules

• Schedule V:

• Drugs with low potential abuse, medical use, lowest potential dependency

• Ex: Some Opiates with Non-Narcotic Ingredients

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

Poisonous chemicals introduced in body• Arsenic

• Cadmium

• Nickel

• lead

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

How do folks get drugs

• From legal medicine

• From over 18 folks

• From peers (most common)

• From adults at home (prescriptions)

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

How are drugs taken in

• Under skin

• Pills orally in mouth

• IV – heroin

• Sniffed cocaine

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

Withdrawal symtoms

• Restless, muscle pain

• Insomnia, diarrhea

• Cold sweat, dilated pupils

• Tremors, panic

• Shallow breathing

• stroke

Page 12: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

People who died of overdose• Know which drug:

• Jim Morrison

• Janis Joplin

• John Belushi

Page 13: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Mixing drugs

• Pure cocaine – from coca plant

• Crack cocaine – mixed

• Speed ball – an upper (cocaine) plus a downer (heroin)

Page 14: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

How do drugs work

• Some are hallucigens like LSD

• Causes changes in emotions, thinking, memory

• From fungus- LSD is odorless, colorless, tasteless- eaten as a capsule

Page 15: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Norcotics

• Feel No pain

• Like heroin, morphine

• Happy, dizzy, drowsy, not hungry, pupils drawn towards each other, cannot use rest room, heart races

Page 16: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Cocaine

• Appetite suppressant

• Initial euphoria

• Lose weight

• Can stay awake

• Very expense

Page 17: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Crack cocaine

• Cheaper

• Very dangerous

• Causes heart attacks

• Most hospital cases for drug abuse

Page 18: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Marijuana – to legalize or not to legalize• Plant has more than 60 different

chemicals called cannabinoids that can give a high

• Has receptor in brain

• More in the frontal lobes, induces deep sleep

• No receptors in brain stem

Page 19: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Marijuana continued

• Receptors in spleen- reduces stress

• Does not cause overdose

• The receptors the cannabinoids bind to is used by a normal endorphin, Anandamoids

• Used throughout history as pain killers

Page 20: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Anandamoids

• An endorphin (natural pain killer)

• Induced naturally by activity such as in pregnancy- when fetal cells bind to uterus

• Making love

• Eating spicy foods, chocolate

• Endorphins also called runners high

Page 21: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Marijuana continued

• Deaths per year due to marijuana use = 0

• Deaths per year due to alcohol overdose – 331

• Be able to argue 2 reasons why it should be legal and 2 reasons why it should not be legal

Page 22: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Toxicology samples

• blood

• 2 consecutive urine samples– Some drugs take a while to show up in

urine (1-3 days)

• Vitreous humor (fluid behind eye)

• Hair samples

Page 23: 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 the presence of Heroin,

morphine, opium – Turns orange-brown in presence of

Amphetamines

• Scott Test: Three solutions

– Blue then pink then back to blue in the presence of Cocaine

• Duquenois-Levine: – Test for marijuana –turns purple

Page 24: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

More Analytical Tests

• Chromatography: separate drugs/tentative ID

• Mass Spectrometry: chemical “fingerprint” no two drugs fragment the same

Page 25: 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” do drugs.

• US drug manufacturers produce enough barbiturates and tranquilizers each year to give every person in the US 40 pills

• (that’s about 12 billion pills)• 18,000 out of 44,000 annual traffic deaths

are alcohol related and send over 2 million people to the hospital

Page 26: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Toxicology of Alcohol

• Alcohol intoxication depends on– Amount of alcohol consumed– Time of consumption– Body weight– Rate of alcohol absorption

Page 27: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Fate of Alcohol

• Alcohol is absorbed into the bloodstream

• Distributed through-out the body’s water

• And finally eliminated by oxidation and excretion

Page 28: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Analysis of BAC

• Breath Tests

• Field Sobriety Tests

• Blood Tests

Page 29: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Breath Tests

• A breath test reflects the alcohol concentration in the pulmonary artery.

• One instrument used for breath tests is called The Breathalyzer.

• The Breathalyzer is a device for collecting and measuring the alcohol content of alveolar breath.

Page 30: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

The Breathalyzer

Page 31: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Field Sobriety Testing

• Two reasons for the field sobriety test:

1. Used as a preliminary test to ascertain the degree of the suspect’s physical impairment

2. To see whether or not an evidential test is justified.

Page 32: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Field Sobriety Tests

• Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus– Involuntary eye jerk as eye moves horizontally

• Walk and Turn (divided attention tasks)• One-Leg Stand

Page 33: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Parts of the brain affected by Alcohol• Alcohol 1st

affects the forebrain and moves backward

• Last affected is medulla oblongata

Page 34: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Alcohol and the Law• 1939-1964:

intoxicated = 0.15% BAC

• 1965: intoxicated = 0.10% BAC

• 2003: intoxicated = 0.08% BAC

At least we don’t live in France, Germany, Ireland, or Japan (0.05%) or especially Sweden (0.02%)!

Page 35: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

Alcohol and the Law

• Try the drink wheel: http://www.intox.com/wheel/drinkwheel.asp

Page 36: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

A nerve cell

Page 37: Forensic Toxicology. Definition: The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues, and organs.

http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/addiction/drugs/• Go to this site

• go to the middle of the page and click on Mouse Party

• Place each mouse in the chair to know

• 1. how the drug works in the brain

• 2. what does the drug do to the person