Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Castro, André Lobo
Data de Publicação: 2016
Outros Autores: Tarelho, Sónia, Dias, Mário, Reis, Flávio, Teixeira, Helena
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/46383
Resumo: Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) is an endogenous compound which has a story of clinical use and illicit abuse since the 1960’s. Its postmortem behaviour, namely regarding degradation and metabolism, has been increasingly studied to be used as a putative biomarker for post-mortem interval (PMI) estimation. Thus, whole blood post-mortem GHB levels were obtained in thirty two real cases with previous information on death and autopsy data. The samples were treated through sample methanolic precipitation followed by GC-MS/MS analysis (LLOQ=0.1 mg/L). No differences were encountered for the other parameters evaluated, including age [under 44 years-old - 7.87  2.06 mg GHB/L (n=7), 45 to 60 years-old - 6.80  3.67 mg GHB/L (n=13) and over 61 years-old - 5.72  2.39 mg GHB/L (n=12), p0.05], gender [men - 7.79  5.04 mg GHB/L (n=23), women - 6.72  2.60 mg GHB/L (n=9), p=0.273], cause of death [accident - 7.96 ± 2.26 mg GHB/L (n=8), suicide - 6.75 ± 3.22 mg GHB/L (n=7) and unknown/natural death - 5.14 ± 2.96 mg GHB/L (n=17), p0.05] and presence or absence of substances [absence - 6.37  2.61 mg GHB/L, presence - 6.96  3.38 mg GHB/L, p=0.405]. On the other hand, the results obtained suggest that the PMI (until 5 days between death and sampling) influences GHB whole blood concentration, noticed namely between 48 and 72 hours (24 - 48 hours (p=0.893), 48 - 72 hours (p<0.05); 72 - 96 hours (p=0.123). This study brings additional data regarding the usefulness of GHB levels in forensic toxicology, which might be further strengthened with larger, but comparable, studies from other laboratories and institutions in the forensic toxicology context.
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spelling Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysisGHBReal casesBlood postmortem samplesPostmortem interval estimationGamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) is an endogenous compound which has a story of clinical use and illicit abuse since the 1960’s. Its postmortem behaviour, namely regarding degradation and metabolism, has been increasingly studied to be used as a putative biomarker for post-mortem interval (PMI) estimation. Thus, whole blood post-mortem GHB levels were obtained in thirty two real cases with previous information on death and autopsy data. The samples were treated through sample methanolic precipitation followed by GC-MS/MS analysis (LLOQ=0.1 mg/L). No differences were encountered for the other parameters evaluated, including age [under 44 years-old - 7.87  2.06 mg GHB/L (n=7), 45 to 60 years-old - 6.80  3.67 mg GHB/L (n=13) and over 61 years-old - 5.72  2.39 mg GHB/L (n=12), p0.05], gender [men - 7.79  5.04 mg GHB/L (n=23), women - 6.72  2.60 mg GHB/L (n=9), p=0.273], cause of death [accident - 7.96 ± 2.26 mg GHB/L (n=8), suicide - 6.75 ± 3.22 mg GHB/L (n=7) and unknown/natural death - 5.14 ± 2.96 mg GHB/L (n=17), p0.05] and presence or absence of substances [absence - 6.37  2.61 mg GHB/L, presence - 6.96  3.38 mg GHB/L, p=0.405]. On the other hand, the results obtained suggest that the PMI (until 5 days between death and sampling) influences GHB whole blood concentration, noticed namely between 48 and 72 hours (24 - 48 hours (p=0.893), 48 - 72 hours (p<0.05); 72 - 96 hours (p=0.123). This study brings additional data regarding the usefulness of GHB levels in forensic toxicology, which might be further strengthened with larger, but comparable, studies from other laboratories and institutions in the forensic toxicology context.Repositório ComumCastro, André LoboTarelho, SóniaDias, MárioReis, FlávioTeixeira, Helena2023-09-05T09:45:27Z2016-08-282016-08-28T00:00:00Zconference objectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.26/46383enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP)instname:FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiainstacron:RCAAP2025-05-10T04:22:59Zoai:comum.rcaap.pt:10400.26/46383Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireinfo@rcaap.ptopendoar:https://opendoar.ac.uk/repository/71602025-05-29T07:06:03.539661Repositórios Científicos de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (RCAAP) - FCCN, serviços digitais da FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologiafalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
title Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
spellingShingle Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
Castro, André Lobo
GHB
Real cases
Blood postmortem samples
Postmortem interval estimation
title_short Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
title_full Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
title_fullStr Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
title_sort Endogenous GHB concentrations in whole blood postmortem samples as a biomarker for post mortem interval estimation – A set of real cases analysis
author Castro, André Lobo
author_facet Castro, André Lobo
Tarelho, Sónia
Dias, Mário
Reis, Flávio
Teixeira, Helena
author_role author
author2 Tarelho, Sónia
Dias, Mário
Reis, Flávio
Teixeira, Helena
author2_role author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Repositório Comum
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Castro, André Lobo
Tarelho, Sónia
Dias, Mário
Reis, Flávio
Teixeira, Helena
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv GHB
Real cases
Blood postmortem samples
Postmortem interval estimation
topic GHB
Real cases
Blood postmortem samples
Postmortem interval estimation
description Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) is an endogenous compound which has a story of clinical use and illicit abuse since the 1960’s. Its postmortem behaviour, namely regarding degradation and metabolism, has been increasingly studied to be used as a putative biomarker for post-mortem interval (PMI) estimation. Thus, whole blood post-mortem GHB levels were obtained in thirty two real cases with previous information on death and autopsy data. The samples were treated through sample methanolic precipitation followed by GC-MS/MS analysis (LLOQ=0.1 mg/L). No differences were encountered for the other parameters evaluated, including age [under 44 years-old - 7.87  2.06 mg GHB/L (n=7), 45 to 60 years-old - 6.80  3.67 mg GHB/L (n=13) and over 61 years-old - 5.72  2.39 mg GHB/L (n=12), p0.05], gender [men - 7.79  5.04 mg GHB/L (n=23), women - 6.72  2.60 mg GHB/L (n=9), p=0.273], cause of death [accident - 7.96 ± 2.26 mg GHB/L (n=8), suicide - 6.75 ± 3.22 mg GHB/L (n=7) and unknown/natural death - 5.14 ± 2.96 mg GHB/L (n=17), p0.05] and presence or absence of substances [absence - 6.37  2.61 mg GHB/L, presence - 6.96  3.38 mg GHB/L, p=0.405]. On the other hand, the results obtained suggest that the PMI (until 5 days between death and sampling) influences GHB whole blood concentration, noticed namely between 48 and 72 hours (24 - 48 hours (p=0.893), 48 - 72 hours (p<0.05); 72 - 96 hours (p=0.123). This study brings additional data regarding the usefulness of GHB levels in forensic toxicology, which might be further strengthened with larger, but comparable, studies from other laboratories and institutions in the forensic toxicology context.
publishDate 2016
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2016-08-28
2016-08-28T00:00:00Z
2023-09-05T09:45:27Z
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