1. Micro-segmental hair analysis for proving drug-facilitated crimes: Evidence that a victim ingested a sleeping aid, diphenhydramine, on a specific day
- Author
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Tadashi Yamamuro, Hiroyuki Inoue, Yuko T. Iwata, Kenji Kuwayama, Tatsuyuki Kanamori, Hirotaro Iwase, Hajime Miyaguchi, Maika Nariai, Kenji Tsujikawa, Hiroki Segawa, and Hiroko Abe
- Subjects
Male ,Drug ,Chlorpheniramine ,Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physiology ,01 natural sciences ,Drug ingestion ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Beverages ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Ingestion ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,Volunteer ,media_common ,Ephedrine ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Hair analysis ,Diphenhydramine ,Reproducibility of Results ,Forensic Medicine ,0104 chemical sciences ,Substance Abuse Detection ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sleep Aids, Pharmaceutical ,Scalp ,Female ,Crime ,Drug analysis ,business ,Law ,Biomarkers ,Hair ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Sleeping aids are often abused in the commission of drug-facilitated crimes. Generally, there is little evidence that a victim ingested a spiked drink unknowingly because the unconscious victim cannot report the situation to the police immediately after the crime occurred. Although conventional segmental hair analysis can estimate the number of months since a targeted drug was ingested, this analysis cannot determine the specific day of ingestion. We recently developed a method of micro-segmental hair analysis using internal temporal markers (ITMs) to estimate the day of drug ingestion. This method was based on volunteer ingestion of ITMs to determine a timescale within individual hair strands, by segmenting a single hair strand at 0.4-mm intervals, corresponding to daily hair growth. This study assessed the ability of this method to estimate the day of ingestion of an over-the-counter sleeping aid, diphenhydramine, which can be easily abused. To model ingestion of a diphenhydramine-spiked drink unknowingly, each subject ingested a dose of diphenhydramine, followed by ingestion of two doses of the ITM, chlorpheniramine, 14days apart. Several hair strands were collected from each subject's scalp several weeks after the second ITM ingestion. Diphenhydramine and ITM were detected at specific regions within individual hair strands. The day of diphenhydramine ingestion was estimated from the distances between the regions and the days of ITM ingestion. The error between estimated and actual ingestion day ranged from -0.1 to 1.9days regardless of subjects and hair collection times. The total time required for micro-segmental analysis of 96 hair segments (hair length: 3.84cm) was approximately 2days and the cost was almost the same as in general drug analysis. This procedure may be applicable to the investigation of crimes facilitated by various drugs.
- Published
- 2018
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