1 forensic science toxicology. 2 toxicology types: environmental--air, water, soil consumer--foods,...

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Page 1: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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FORENSIC SCIENCEToxicology

Page 2: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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TOXICOLOGYTYPES:

• Environmental--air, water, soil

• Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs

• Medical, clinical, forensic

Page 3: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Forensic Toxicology Postmortem--medical examiner or coroner Criminal--motor vehicle accidents (MVA),

assault, etc. Workplace drug testing Sports--human and animal

Page 4: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Why do Toxicology?Toxicology can:

• Be a cause of death

• Contribute to death

• Cause impairment

• Explain behavior

Page 5: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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OUR STUDY

Drugs Poisons

Basically, toxicology involves the separation, detection, identification and measurement of the drug and/or poison.

Page 6: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Testing

PDR’s--Physician’s Desk Reference Field Tests--presumptive tests Lab Tests--conclusive tests

Page 7: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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PDR’s

Page 8: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Analysis of Drugs

Controlled Substances Act

• Schedule I--heroin, LSD

• Schedule II--morphine, methadone

• Schedule III--barbiturates, amphetamines

• Schedule IV--other stimulates and depressants

• Schedule V--codeine

Page 9: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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DRUG IDENTIFICATIONScreening tests or

presumptive tests Color tests Microcrystalline test--

a reagent is added that produces a crystalline precipitate which are unique for certain drugs.

Confirmation tests Chromatography Spectrophotometry Mass spectrometry

Page 10: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Presumptive Color Tests

Marquis--turns purple in the presence of most opium derivatives and orange-brown with amphetamines

Dillie-Koppanyi--turns violet-blue in the presence of barbiturates

Page 11: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Presumptive Color Tests Duquenois-Levine--turns a purple color in

the presence of marijuana Van Urk--turns a blue-purple in the

presence of LSD Scott test--color test for cocaine

Page 12: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Confirmation TestsChromatography

Techniques for separating mixtures into their component compounds

Includes two phases--one mobile and one stationary that flow past one another

As the mixture separates it interacts with the two phases.

Page 13: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Types of Chromatography Paper Thin Layer Gas Pyrolysis Gas High Pressure Liquid (HPLC)

Page 14: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Paper Chromatography

Stationary phase--paper

Mobile phase--a liquid solvent

Capillary action moves the mobile phase through the stationary phase

Page 15: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Thin Layer Chromatography Stationary phase--a

thin layer of coating on a sheet of plastic or glass (usually aluminum or silica)

Mobile phase--a liquid solvent

from www.lbp.police.uk

Page 16: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Retention Factor (Rf)

This is a number that represents how far a compound travels in a particular solvent

It is determined by measuring the distance the compound traveled and dividing it by the distance the solvent traveled.

Page 17: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Retention Factor (Rf)

If the Rf value for an unknown compound is close to or the same as that for the known compound, the two compounds are most likely similar or identical (a match)

Page 18: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Gas Chromatography

Stationary phase--a solid or very syrupy liquid lines a tube or column

Mobile phase--an inert gas like nitrogen or helium

Page 19: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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GC Analysis Shows a peak that is proportional to the

quantity of the substance present Uses retention time instead of Rf for the

quantitative analysis

Page 20: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Retention Time Time between the sample being injected

and when it exits the column reaching the detector.

Tm is the time taken for the mobile phase to pass through the column

Page 21: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Pyrolysis Gas Chromatography

Used when a sample does not readily dissolve in a solvent

If heating this sample decomposes it into gaseous products, these products can be analyzed by CGC

A pyrogram is the visual representation of the results

Page 22: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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High Pressure LiquidChromatography

Stationary phase--fine solid particles Mobile phase--a liquid solvent

A solvent is pumped through the column as a sample is injected into it. The sample, as it moves, is slowed to differing degrees, depending on its interaction with the stationary phase. Different components of the sample mixture are, therefore, separated.

Page 23: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Mass Spectrometry

Gas chromatography has one major drawback--it does not give a specific identification. By teaming a gas chromatograph with a mass spectrometer, this is accomplished.

The mixture is separated first in a gas chromatograph. The GC column is directly attached to the mass spectrometer where a beam of electrons is shot through the sample molecules.

Page 24: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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MS (cont.)

The electrons cause the molecules to lose electrons and become positively charged. These are unstable and decompose into many smaller fragments. These fragments pass through an electric or magnetic field and are separated according to their masses.

NO TWO SUBSTANCES PRODUCE THE SAME FRAGMENTATION PATTERN.

Page 25: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Example of a GS/MS

Page 26: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Human Analysisfor Drugs

Blood

Urine

Vitreous

Bile

Liver tissue

Brain tissue

Kidney tissue

Spleen tissue

Page 27: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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“If all those buried in our cemeteries who were poisoned could raise their hands, we would probably be shocked by the numbers. --John Trestrail

Page 28: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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POISONERS in HISTORY Olympias—a famous Greek poisoner Locusta—personal poisoner of Emperor Nero Lucretia Borgia—father was Pope Alexander VI Madame Giulia Toffana—committed over 600 successful

poisonings, including two Popes. Hieronyma Spara—formed a society to teach women how

to murder their husbands Madame de Brinvilliers and Catherine Deshayes—French

poisoners.

AND many others through modern times.

Page 29: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

Symptoms of VariousTypes of Poisoning

Type of Poison Symptom/Evidence• Caustic Poison (lye) Characteristic burns around the lips

and mouth of the victim

• Carbon Monoxide Red or pink patches on the chest and thighs. Unusually brighter red lividity

• Sulfuric acid Black vomit

• Hydrochloric acid Greenish-brown vomit

• Nitric acid Yellow vomit

• Phosphorous Coffee brown vomit. Onion or garlic odor

• Cyanide Burnt almond odor

• Arsenic, Mercury Pronounced diarrhea

• Methyl (wood) or Nausea and vomiting,

Isopropyl (rubbing) alcohol unconsciousness, possibly blindness

Page 30: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Points to Know about aPoison

Form Common color Characteristic odor Solubility Taste Common sources Lethal dose Mechanism Possible methods of

administration Time interval of onset of

symptoms.

Symptoms resulting from an acute exposure

Symptoms resulting from chronic exposure

Disease states mimicked by poisoning

Notes relating to the victim Specimens from victim Analytical detection methods Known toxic levels Notes pertinent to analysis of

poison List of cases in which poison

was used

from “Criminal Poisoning” by John Trestrail

Page 31: 1 FORENSIC SCIENCE Toxicology. 2 TOXICOLOGY TYPES: Environmental--air, water, soil Consumer--foods, cosmetics, drugs Medical, clinical, forensic

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Evidence

ClassPresumptive or screening tests can be used to

determine that it is a drug.

IndividualChromatography, especially in conjunction with

mass spectrometry, will specifically identify a drug or poison and its components.