AI Article Synopsis

  • - An 11-month-old boy died from an acute tramadol (TR) intoxication, with an exceptionally high blood TR concentration of 6240 μg/L, linked to the mother's TR addiction and accidental contamination during bottle preparation.
  • - Analysis of hair and nails from the infant, mother, mother's partner, and sister revealed high levels of TR in the infant's hair, indicating continuous exposure, while the mother's samples showed a similar pattern, corroborating her addiction and the potential for environmental contamination.
  • - The findings emphasize the importance of analyzing hair and nails from all family members in cases of suspected poisoning to understand the exposure sources and the impact of external contamination.

Article Abstract

An 11-month-old boy was found dead. Autopsy findings (cyanosis and polyvisceral congestion) and blood tramadol (TR) concentration of 6240 μg/L were consistent with an acute TR intoxication. In this poisoning situation, owing to the mother's statements (TR addiction leading to daily TR-orange juice mixture preparation accidentally used for the baby bottle preparation by the mother's partner), and the question of possible previous TR administrations to the infant, hair and/or nails (infant, mother, partner, 6-year-old sister) analysis was performed. Hair (2-cm-long hair segments from proximal [S1] to distal [S3]) and nails concentrations (pg/mg; nd: not detected) were as follows: Infant (hair: TR 1420 [S1], 1622 [S2], 2736 [S3]; O-DMT 16-38; N-DMT 34-100 [TR in significant quantities in the hair decontamination bath]-toenails: TR 584; O-DMT 8; N-DMT 15), mother (hair: TR 2340 [S1], 2150 [S2], 2500 [S3]; O-DMT 704-1170; N-DMT 827-1360), mother's partner (fingernails: TR 72; O-DMT nd; N-DMT nd) and sister (hair: TR 261 [S1], 524 [S2]; O-DMT 15 [S1], 16 [S2]; N-DMT 20 [S1], 38 [S2]). Metabolite ratio (infant and sister hair) was comparable to those observed in hair of pharmaceutical industry employees manufacturing tramadol. TR in washing baths, low observed nail concentrations (infant and partner) confirm (i) TR-related mother's addiction and (ii) external contamination issues (TR in sweat of the child at the time of death and in living environment) to explain the infant's keratinized samples results. This case report illustrates the interest of analyzing keratinized matrices of the whole family in such a situation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/dta.3485DOI Listing

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