Forensic Medical Sciences, Department of Health Science, University of Florence, Largo Brambilla 3, Florence 50134, Italy; Laboratory of Personal Identification and Forensic Morphology, Department of Health Sciences, University of Florence, Largo Brambilla 3, Florence 50134, Italy.
Forensic Medicine and Laboratory (For. Med. Lab), Institute of Legal Medicine, University of Macerata, Via Don Minzoni 9, Macerata 62100, Italy.
Forensic Sci Int. 2024 Oct;363:112185. doi: 10.1016/j.forsciint.2024.112185. Epub 2024 Aug 5.
Post-mortem toxicology constantly deals with the research of reliable alternative matrices to be applied in case of highly damaged corpses (such us carbonized, skeletonized, human remains, etc.). Teeth represent a promising alternative matrix since dental tissues are endowed by different features, resistance and stability after death.
Since scant literature reported on the pharmacokinetics and mechanism of incorporation of xenobiotics into dental tissues, this pilot research aims to investigate whether in the pulp can be detected the same substances found in blood in drug related death cases. Secondly, the study is addressed to disclose the possible deposit of drugs in dental hard tissues (dentine and/or enamel), thus contributing to reconstruct the drug abuse history (timing, e.g.).
The study experimented with a novel method to separately analyse dental enamel, dentin, and pulp, applied to 10 teeth collected during autopsies of drug-related deaths along with blood and hair samples for classic toxicological analyses. Each tooth was prepared by "pulverization technique" and then analysed by gas chromatography paired with mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and ultra high performance liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC/HR-MS) for searching cocaine, opiates, and metabolites. The results were then compared with those obtained from blood and hair samples.
Preliminary results demonstrated that teeth differ from any other classic matrix (blood and hairs) since the qualitative correspondence of the detected substances between pulp and blood as well as dental hard tissues and hair suggests that they can be useful in post-mortem evaluation as a unique matrix for both acute and chronic assumptions of drugs. The mechanism of accumulation of substances in mineralized dental tissues emerged the most significant result, being influenced by the type of molecule and the method of assumption. The main limitation of this study is the limited availability of the sample and the absence of anamnestic information of the time, rates and method of drug assumption during life. Further research is necessary to systematically investigate the distribution of different substances within the different tissues of the tooth.
死后毒理学不断研究可靠的替代基质,以应用于高度受损的尸体(如碳化、骨骼化、遗骸等)。牙齿是一种很有前途的替代基质,因为牙髓组织具有不同的特征、死后的抵抗力和稳定性。
由于关于外源性物质在牙髓组织中代谢动力学和掺入机制的文献很少,这项初步研究旨在调查在牙髓中是否可以检测到与药物相关死亡案例中在血液中发现的相同物质。其次,该研究旨在揭示药物在牙硬组织(牙本质和/或牙釉质)中的可能沉积,从而有助于重建药物滥用史(时间等)。
该研究实验了一种新方法,用于分别分析牙釉质、牙本质和牙髓,应用于 10 颗从与药物相关的死亡案例中收集的牙齿,以及血液和头发样本进行经典毒理学分析。每颗牙齿都通过“粉碎技术”进行处理,然后通过气相色谱与质谱联用(GC-MS)和超高效液相色谱与高分辨率质谱联用(UHPLC/HR-MS)进行分析,以寻找可卡因、阿片类药物及其代谢物。然后将结果与血液和头发样本的结果进行比较。
初步结果表明,牙齿与任何其他经典基质(血液和头发)不同,因为在牙髓与血液以及牙硬组织与头发中检测到的物质的定性对应关系表明,它们可以作为一种独特的基质,用于死后评估,用于急性和慢性药物假设。物质在矿化牙组织中的积累机制是最显著的结果,受到分子类型和假设方法的影响。这项研究的主要局限性是样本的有限可用性以及缺乏生命期间药物假设的时间、速率和方法的病史信息。需要进一步研究以系统地研究不同物质在牙齿不同组织中的分布。