Abstract
The relationship of methadone dose with post-mortem blood concentration was investigated using data collected from 1994 coronial cases in the Australian state of New South Wales. Data on 31 subjects were summarized using linear regression. The weight-adjusted methadone dose, gender, methadone maintenance treatment status and its interaction with adjusted-dose were all significant predictors of post-mortem blood methadone concentration. Data on the death of a young man from the toxic effects of three daily doses of 30 mg methadone are used to give an example of a pair of observed (0.74 mg/l) and predicted (0.48 mg/l) post-mortem blood concentrations. The estimated post-mortem blood concentration for male maintenance patients is at least twice the trough plasma levels estimated from previously published studies of living maintenance patients. The estimated post-mortem blood concentration for female maintenance patients is at least three times the estimated trough level of living subjects. We conclude that post-mortem methadone redistribution is probably the principal cause of the observed differences between males and females in post-mortem blood concentrations and the differences between estimated concentrations for living and deceased subjects. Caplehorn JRM, Drummer OH. Methadone dose and post-mortem blood concentration. Drug Alcohol Rev.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 329-333 |
Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | Drug and Alcohol Review |
Volume | 21 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 2002 |
Keywords
- Forensic science
- Human
- Methadone
- Substance abuse treatment
- Toxicology