Toxicology Intro - Poisons & Proof
- Toxicology: Scientific study of poisons, their effects, detection, and treatment.
- Poison: Any substance that, when introduced into or absorbed by a living organism, causes injury, illness, or death, typically by chemical means.
- Classification of Poisons:
- Corrosives (e.g., Acids, Alkalis)
- Irritants (e.g., Arsenic, Mercury)
- Systemic (Neurotics, Cardiac, Asphyxiants)
- Miscellaneous (e.g., Food additives, Pesticides)
- Proof of Poisoning (Medico-Legal):
- Motive, opportunity, access to poison.
- Symptoms observed before death.
- Post-mortem appearances.
- Chemical analysis of viscera, body fluids.
- Detection of poison in food, medicine, or containers.
- Sample Collection & Preservation (Viscera):
- Stomach & entire contents.
- Small intestine (~50 cm) with contents, tied at both ends.
- Liver (~500g), Spleen (half), Kidneys (both, halved).
- Blood: 10-20 ml (Sodium Fluoride for alcohol; EDTA for others).
- Urine: ~50 ml.
- Vitreous humor: Especially for alcohol, drugs.
- Preservative: Rectified spirit. Saturated saline if spirit unavailable. ⚠️ Formalin generally avoided as it interferes with tests.
⭐ Vitreous humor is often the best sample for estimating blood alcohol levels in decomposed bodies due to its resistance to putrefaction and microbial contamination.

Common Poisons - Deadly Dozen
- Organophosphates (OPC) & Carbamates:
- Mechanism: Irreversible (OPC) / Reversible (Carbamates) AChE inhibition → cholinergic crisis.
- Features: 📌 DUMBBELS (Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchospasm/Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation/Sweating). Muscle fasciculations, paralysis.
- Antidote: Atropine (muscarinic), Pralidoxime (PAM - for OPC, nicotinic).
- Paracetamol (Acetaminophen):
- Mechanism: Toxic metabolite NAPQI depletes glutathione → liver necrosis.
- Features: N/V, RUQ pain, jaundice, encephalopathy.
- Antidote: N-acetylcysteine (NAC). Nomogram guided. Fatal dose: >15g.
- Salicylates (Aspirin):
- Mechanism: Uncouples oxidative phosphorylation; respiratory alkalosis → metabolic acidosis.
- Features: Tinnitus, hyperventilation, fever, AMS, coma.
- Management: Alkalinization of urine, hemodialysis.
- Opioids (e.g., Morphine, Heroin):
- Features: CNS depression, respiratory depression, miosis (pinpoint pupils).
- Antidote: Naloxone.
- Cyanide:
- Mechanism: Inhibits cytochrome oxidase → cellular hypoxia.
- Features: Almond breath, cherry-red skin (late), rapid LOC, seizures.
- Antidote: Hydroxocobalamin, Sodium thiosulfate + Sodium nitrite.
- Methanol:
- Mechanism: Metabolized to formic acid → optic neuritis, metabolic acidosis.
- Features: Visual disturbances ("snowstorm vision"), blindness, AGMA.
- Antidote: Fomepizole, Ethanol.

⭐ In Organophosphate poisoning, atropinization is judged by dry mouth, ↓ secretions, ↑ Heart Rate (>80 bpm), and pupil dilation. Target signs indicate adequate muscarinic blockade.
Analytical Tox - Lab Detectives
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Goal: Detect, identify, quantify drugs/poisons in biological evidence.
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Specimens: Blood, urine, vitreous humor, bile, liver, brain, hair. Chain of Custody is vital.
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Process: Screening → Confirmation → Quantification → Interpretation.
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Screening: Rapid, sensitive.
- Immunoassays (ELISA, EMIT).
- Color tests, TLC.
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Confirmation: Specific, accurate.
- GC-MS: Gold standard for volatiles (e.g., alcohol).
- LC-MS/MS: Non-volatiles, thermolabile (e.g., opioids, benzodiazepines).
- HPLC: Precise quantification.
⭐ Vitreous humor: Best for alcohol (ethanol) in decomposed bodies; resists putrefaction better than blood.
A visual of GC-MS and LC-MS machines in a lab setting would be appropriate here, perhaps with a label indicating "Analytical Instruments".
Medico-Legal Tox - Doctor's Duty
- Suspect poisoning: Based on history & clinical findings.
- Inform Police: Mandatory (CrPC Sec 39). Failure is punishable.
- Dying Declaration: Record if patient apprehends death (IEA Sec 32).
- Magistrate ideal; doctor can if urgent.
- Prioritize Treatment: Save life first.
- Sample Collection: Crucial for viscera, blood, urine. Ensure proper labeling, sealing.
- Documentation: Detailed Medico-Legal Case (MLC) report.
- Confidentiality: Maintain, unless law requires disclosure.
⭐ Under CrPC Sec 39, a doctor must immediately report suspected poisoning to police/magistrate; failure is a legal offense.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Ethanol: Zero-order kinetics for metabolism; Widmark's formula estimates BAC.
- Methanol: Causes metabolic acidosis, optic neuritis; antidote fomepizole or ethanol.
- Organophosphates: Induce cholinergic crisis (SLUDGE); treat with atropine and oximes.
- Carbon Monoxide (CO): High Hb affinity, cherry-red lividity, forms carboxyhemoglobin.
- Cyanide: Inhibits cytochrome oxidase causing histotoxic hypoxia; use nitrites, thiosulfate.
- Arsenic: Characteristic Aldrich-Mees lines, raindrop pigmentation, garlic odor.
- Opioids: Classic triad of pinpoint pupils, respiratory depression, coma; antidote naloxone.
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