2006
DOI: 10.1191/0960327106ht596oa
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Alcohol distribution in different postmortem body fluids

Abstract: Aims: The determination of postmortem ethanol is one of the most frequently requested analyses in forensic toxicology and of extreme importance, especially when the concentration is found to be above the legal level for intoxication at one sampling site and below that level at another sampling site. Because of the unavailability of blood samples for toxicological analysis or even contaminated samples, there is an enormous effort to find alternative sampling sites, such as vitreous humor for ethanol an… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…article. 1 The mean VH/blood ratio of alcohol concentration in many previous investigations was reported as being between 1.10 and 1.20:1, which implies a 10 Á 20% higher concentration in the VH and this fits well with expectations based on the average water content of autopsy specimens. 3 Á 8 The main results from the De Martinis et al .…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…article. 1 The mean VH/blood ratio of alcohol concentration in many previous investigations was reported as being between 1.10 and 1.20:1, which implies a 10 Á 20% higher concentration in the VH and this fits well with expectations based on the average water content of autopsy specimens. 3 Á 8 The main results from the De Martinis et al .…”
supporting
confidence: 87%
“…Samples were placed in 4 mL plastic tubes containing sodium fluoride and EDTA, properly identified and stored immediately after their arrival at the laboratory in a refrigerator at 4 8C until the analysis. The method used for alcohol analysis was gas chromatography with a flame ionization detector using the headspace technique [10].…”
Section: Toxicological Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Headspace injections were performed using an automatic sampler (CombiPal, CTC Analytics, Zwingen, Switzerland), following the procedure described by de Martinis et al (2006). Briefly, a 1 ml blood sample, containing sodium fluoride as a preservative, was placed into a 20 ml headspace vial with 1 ml of distilled water, 1 g of NaCl (to increase recovery due to 'salting-out' effects) and isobutanol (100 mg dl -1 ) as internal standard.…”
Section: Ethanol Blood Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%