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Postmortem changes in blood amitriptyline concentration
Authors:DJ Pounder  V Owen  C Quigley
Affiliation:Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Dundee, Scotland.
Abstract:Detailed toxicological studies were undertaken on two suicides by amitriptyline overdose, one with salicylate also. In the first case, 10 initial blood samples taken 21 h after body discovery and an estimated 28 1/2 h after overdose had drug concentration (mg/L) ranges of 2.5-12 for amitriptyline (AM), 0.7-3.1 for nortriptyline (NOR), and 81-244 for salicylate (SAL). Ten blood samples taken 42 h later showed corresponding ranges of 1-39 AM, 0.6-7.0 NOR, and 86-310 SAL. Sample haemoglobin concentrations (range, 8.7-23.5 g/dl) did not correlate with drug concentrations. Postmortem increase in pulmonary vein AM concentration occurred more rapidly than in the pulmonary artery, likely reflecting relative ease of diffusion across the vessel walls from lung (AM, 60 mg/kg). In nine tissue samples, drug concentrations (mg/kg) were highest in the liver: AM, 301; and SAL, 670. Considerable drug residue was present in gastric contents, duodenal contents, and seven sequential small bowel contents. In both cases, sanguineous putrefactive pleural fluid showed higher AM concentrations on the left than on the right (2.0 vs 1.4 and 23 vs 16), likely reflecting diffusion from gastric drug residue. The detailed case data illustrate the intensity and complexity of postmortem drug diffusion from reservoirs in solid organs, such as the lungs, and unabsorbed gastric residue, into the blood and putrefactive fluids.
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