4.3 Article

Bath Salts the New York City Medical Examiner Experience: A 3-Year Retrospective Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES
Volume 62, Issue 3, Pages 695-699

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1556-4029.13316

Keywords

forensic science; bath salts; cathinone; methylone; ethylone; drug deaths; methylenedioxymethamphetamine

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Bath salts are synthetic derivatives of cathinones, compounds found in the leaves of Catha edulis, which possesses amphetamine-like properties. At the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner, we conducted a 3-year retrospective analysis of deaths in which cathinones were detected. Two categories emerged; those in which cathinones were a contributory cause of death (15 cases) and those in which they were an incidental finding (15 cases). Of the former group, 13 were associated with additional intoxicants; two deaths were attributed solely to cathinone intoxication, both survived 10 h: a man whose postmortem blood methylone concentration was 0.71 mg/L and a woman whose postmortem blood ethylone concentration was 1.7 mg/L. In the latter category, there were several individuals who had higher concentrations of cathinones than the above two, the highest being a blood methylone of 4.8 mg/L. Based upon our data and the literature presented, lethal concentrations of cathinones cannot be established.

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