Zaitsu Kei, Katagi Munehiro, Kamata Tooru, Kamata Hiroe, Shima Noriaki, Tsuchihashi Hitoshi, Hayashi Takeshi, Kuroki Hisanaga, Matoba Ryoji
Forensic Science Laboratory, Osaka Prefectural Police Headquarters, Japan.
Forensic Sci Int. 2008 May 2;177(1):77-84. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2007.11.001. Epub 2007 Dec 21.
A newly synthesized designer drug, para-methoxyethylamphetamine (PMEA) was unexpectedly detected in the postmortem specimens of fatality involving drug intoxication in 2005, Japan. For unequivocal identification, the isomeric discrimination of PMEA and its positional-isomers was performed by GC/MS with the trifluoroacetylation. In order to prove the intake of PMEA, the characteristic metabolites of PMEA were also identified by GC/MS analysis of the urine specimen with trifluoroacetylation. As a result, para-methoxyamphetamine, para-hydroxyethylamphetamine (POHEA) and para-hydroxyamphetamine were identified as the major metabolites of PMEA. For the quantitative analyses of PMEA and its three metabolites in body fluids, an automated column-switching LC/MS procedure was developed, and applied to the postmortem blood and urine specimens. In this fatal case, blood concentration of PMEA was estimated to be 12.2 microg/mL and this level seemed extremely high in comparison with lethal blood-levels of its analogues, representing acute-intoxication of the victim. Based on the quantitative results, PMEA was found to be extensively metabolized to POHEA via O-demethylation, partly followed by its conjugation.