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Fentanyl-Related Deaths: Demographics, Circumstances, and Toxicology of 112 Cases

NCJ Number
128907
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Volume: 36 Issue: 2 Dated: (March 1991) Pages: 422-433
Author(s)
G L Henderson
Date Published
1991
Length
12 pages
Annotation
Since 1979, the potent narcotic analgesic fentanyl and its analogs have been synthesized in clandestine laboratories and sold as heroin substitutes. At least 112 overdose deaths have been associated with their use.
Abstract
In this study, toxicology data, autopsy findings, and coroners' investigative reports were reviewed in order to construct a profile of the typical fentanyl overdose victim and to identify any factors that might heighten the risk of death from fentanyl use. The "typical" fentanyl overdose victim was 32.5 plus or minus 6.7 years of age (range, 19 to 57 years), male (78 percent compared with 22 percent female), and Caucasian (50 percent, compared with 29 percent Hispanic, 20 percent black, and 0.9 percent Asian). With the exception of his or her age, the typical fentanyl overdose victim is quite similar to the typical heroin user. Nearly all the deaths (94 percent) occurred in California, yet within the State they were widely distributed throughout 17 counties and 44 cities. Pulmonary edema and congestion and needle puncture sites were consistent postmortem findings. No preexisting medical conditions were identified as possible risk factors. Although most of the fentanyl victims had a prior history of intravenous drug use, morphine or codeine were not commonly found, which suggests that the victims had little or no opiate tolerance. Ethanol was present in 38 percent of the cases and is thought to be a significant risk factor. Mean fentanyl concentrations in the body fluids were quite low: 3.0 plus or minus 3.1 ng/mL (0.3 plus or minus 0/31 ug/dL) in blood and 3.9 plus or minus 4.3 ng/mL (0.39 plus or minus 0.43 ug/dL) in urine, measured by radioimmunoassay. Although the potency of the analogs and the purity of street samples varies considerably, it is probably the general availability of the drug rather than the potency of a particular analog that determines the incidence of overdose deaths. 5 tables, 2 figures, and 40 references (Author abstract)

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