Department of Forensic Genetics and Forensic Toxicology, National Board of Forensic Medicine, 587 58 Linköping, Sweden.
Forensic Sci Int. 2010 Jul 15;200(1-3):1-20. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2010.02.021. Epub 2010 Mar 20.
Reliable information about the elimination rate of alcohol (ethanol) from blood is often needed in forensic science and legal medicine when alcohol-related crimes, such as drunken driving or drug-related sexual assault are investigated. A blood sample for forensic analysis might not be taken until several hours after an offence was committed. The courts usually want to know the suspect's blood-alcohol concentration (BAC) at some earlier time, such as the time of driving. Making these back calculations or retrograde extrapolations of BAC in criminal cases has many proponents and critics. Ethanol is eliminated from the body mainly by oxidative metabolism in the liver by Class I isoenzymes of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH). Ethanol is an example of a drug for which the Michaelis-Menten pharmacokinetic model applies and the Michaelis constant (k(m)) for Class I ADH is at a BAC of 2-10mg/100mL. This means that the enzyme is saturated with substrate after the first few drinks and that zero-order kinetics is adequate to describe the declining phase of the BAC profile in most forensic situations (BAC>20mg/100mL). After drinking on an empty stomach, the elimination rate of ethanol from blood falls within the range 10-15 mg/100mL/h. In non-fasted subjects the rate of elimination tends to be in the range 15-20mg/100mL/h. In alcoholics during detoxification, because activity of microsomal enzyme (CYP2E1) is boosted, the ethanol elimination rate might be 25-35 mg/100mL/h. The slope of the BAC declining phase is slightly steeper in women compared with men, which seems to be related to gender differences in liver weight in relation to lean body mass. The present evidence-based review suggests that the physiological range of ethanol elimination rates from blood is from 10 to 35 mg/100mL/h. In moderate drinkers 15 mg/100mL/h remains a good average value for the population, whereas in apprehended drivers 19 mg/100mL/h is more appropriate, since many of these individuals are binge drinkers or alcoholics. In preparing this article, a large number of peer-reviewed publications were scrutinized. Only those meeting certain standards in experimental design, dose of alcohol and blood-sampling protocol were used. The results presented can hopefully serve as best-practice guidelines when questions arise in criminal and civil litigation about the elimination rate of ethanol from blood in humans.
在法医学和法律医学中,当涉及到与酒精有关的犯罪,如酒后驾车或与药物有关的性侵犯时,通常需要可靠的信息来了解血液中酒精(乙醇)的消除率。在犯罪发生后几个小时,可能才会采集法医分析用的血样。法庭通常希望知道嫌疑人在某些更早的时间的血液酒精浓度(BAC),例如驾驶时。在刑事案件中进行这些 BAC 的回溯计算或逆行推断有很多支持者和批评者。乙醇主要通过肝脏 I 类同工酶的氧化代谢来消除(ADH)。乙醇是米氏门控药代动力学模型适用的药物之一,I 类 ADH 的米氏常数(k(m))在 BAC 为 2-10mg/100mL 时。这意味着,在最初的几次饮酒后,酶被底物饱和,零级动力学足以描述大多数法医情况下 BAC 谱的下降阶段(BAC>20mg/100mL)。空腹饮酒后,血液中乙醇的消除率在 10-15mg/100mL/h 范围内。非空腹受试者的消除率倾向于在 15-20mg/100mL/h 范围内。在解毒期间的酗酒者中,由于微粒体酶(CYP2E1)的活性增强,乙醇消除率可能为 25-35mg/100mL/h。与男性相比,女性 BAC 下降阶段的斜率略陡,这似乎与与瘦体重相关的肝重的性别差异有关。本循证综述表明,血液中乙醇消除率的生理范围为 10-35mg/100mL/h。在中度饮酒者中,15mg/100mL/h 仍然是人群的一个良好平均值,而在被捕的驾驶员中,19mg/100mL/h 更合适,因为这些人中有很多是狂饮者或酗酒者。在撰写本文时,仔细审查了大量同行评议的出版物。只有那些在实验设计、酒精剂量和采血方案方面符合某些标准的出版物才被使用。希望本文呈现的结果能够为刑事和民事诉讼中有关人类血液中乙醇消除率的问题提供最佳实践指南。