Effects of natural environments on drug contents in nails: comparison of drug residual rates between nails and hair to determine the drug-use history of corpses in unnatural death cases using micro-segmental analysis.

IF 2.8 4区 医学 Q2 TOXICOLOGY Forensic Toxicology Pub Date : 2024-08-09 DOI:10.1007/s11419-024-00701-4
Kenji Kuwayama, Hajime Miyaguchi, Tatsuyuki Kanamori, Kenji Tsujikawa, Tadashi Yamamuro, Hiroki Segawa, Yuki Okada, Yuko T Iwata
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Abstract

Purpose: We previously developed evaluation methods using micro-segmental analysis (MSA) to examine the effects of external environments on drug content in hair and nails. In this study, the effects of the natural environmental factors (water, temperature, humidity, light, and soil) on drug contents in nails were examined and compared with our previous experimental data on hair.

Methods: Four hay-fever medicines were used as model drugs (fexofenadine, epinastine, cetirizine, and desloratadine) to evaluate drug stability in the nails. Reference nails containing the four medicines were collected from patients with hay fever who ingested the medicines daily for four months. The nails were exposed to various natural environments for up to four months.

Results: The effects of temperature, humidity, and light on drug contents in the nails were comparatively small. Soil significantly decomposed the nail surfaces and decreased the drug content of the nails (up to 17 %). Water also decreased the drug content (up to 12 %), although no apparent changes in nail surfaces were observed.

Conclusions: In comparison with hair data obtained under the same environmental conditions, light affected drugs in the hair rather than in nails, whereas water and soil greatly affected drugs in the nails rather than in hair. Although the disposition of drugs incorporated in the tissues differed between nails and hair, the analytes were detected in nails and hair strands left in severe natural environments. MSA could be useful for estimating drug-use histories and personal profiles using the nails and hair of a corpse.

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自然环境对指甲中药物含量的影响:比较指甲和头发的药物残留率,利用微分段分析法确定非正常死亡案件中尸体的吸毒史。
目的:我们之前开发了利用微分段分析(MSA)的评估方法来研究外部环境对头发和指甲中药物含量的影响。在本研究中,我们研究了自然环境因素(水、温度、湿度、光照和土壤)对指甲中药物含量的影响,并与之前的头发实验数据进行了比较:方法:以四种花粉热药物(非索非那定、依匹斯汀、西替利嗪和地氯雷他定)为模型,评估药物在指甲中的稳定性。含有这四种药物的参考指甲是从花粉症患者身上采集的,这些患者在四个月内每天服用这些药物。这些指甲暴露在各种自然环境中长达四个月:温度、湿度和光照对指甲中药物含量的影响相对较小。土壤会明显分解指甲表面,降低指甲中的药物含量(最高达 17%)。水也降低了指甲中的药物含量(最高达 12%),但指甲表面未观察到明显变化:结论:与在相同环境条件下获得的头发数据相比,光对头发中药物的影响比对指甲中药物的影响大,而水和土壤对指甲中药物的影响比对头发中药物的影响大。虽然指甲和头发中药物在组织中的分布情况不同,但在恶劣自然环境下的指甲和头发中都能检测到分析物。MSA 可用于利用尸体的指甲和毛发估计吸毒史和个人特征。
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来源期刊
Forensic Toxicology
Forensic Toxicology TOXICOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
40
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The journal Forensic Toxicology provides an international forum for publication of studies on toxic substances, drugs of abuse, doping agents, chemical warfare agents, and their metabolisms and analyses, which are related to laws and ethics. It includes original articles, reviews, mini-reviews, short communications, and case reports. Although a major focus of the journal is on the development or improvement of analytical methods for the above-mentioned chemicals in human matrices, appropriate studies with animal experiments are also published. Forensic Toxicology is the official publication of the Japanese Association of Forensic Toxicology (JAFT) and is the continuation of the Japanese Journal of Forensic Toxicology (ISSN 0915-9606).
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