Publication | Open Access
Fatal Strychnine Poisoning: Application of Gas Chromatography and Tandem Mass Spectrometry
33
Citations
23
References
2000
Year
Forensic ChemistryGas ChromatographySkeletal MuscleBioanalysisForensic MedicineTandem Mass SpectrometryAnalytical ChemistryToxicologyClinical ChemistryChromatographyPoisoningChemical PathologyPharmacologyIon FragmentationFatal Strychnine PoisoningForensic ToxicologyMass SpectrometryMedicineFatal PoisoningPharmacokineticsDrug Analysis
The history and toxicological findings in a case of suicidal fatal strychnine poisoning are presented along with a description of the analytical methods. Detection and quantitation of strychnine in body fluids and tissues was performed by gas chromatography (GC) with nitrogen-phosphorus detection, using organic extraction and calibration by a standard addition method. Strychnine concentrations in subclavian blood (1.82 mg/mL), inferior vena cava blood (3.32 mg/mL), urine (3.35 mg/mL), bile (11.4 mg/mL), liver (98.6 mg/kg), lung (12.3 mg/kg), spleen (11.8 mg/kg), brain (2.42 mg/kg), and skeletal muscle (2.32 mg/kg) were determined. Confirmation of strychnine in blood and tissue was performed by GC with detection by tandem ion-trap mass spectrometry (MS). GC-MS-MS analysis, employing electron ionization followed by unit mass resolution and collision-induced dissociation of strychnine, resulted in confirmatory ions with mass-to-charge ratios of 334 (parent ion), 319, 306, 277, 261, 246, 233, and 220. Additional confirmation was provided by GC-MS-MS-MS analysis of each confirmatory ion, revealing an ion fragmentation pathway consistent with the molecular structure of strychnine. The case demonstrates body tissue and fluid distribution of strychnine in a fatal poisoning and the application of tandem MS in medical examiner casework.
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