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Fatal methemoglobinemia in three suicidal sodium nitrite poisonings
Author(s) -
Dean Dorothy E.,
Looman Karen B.,
Topmiller Robert G.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of forensic sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.715
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1556-4029
pISSN - 0022-1198
DOI - 10.1111/1556-4029.14689
Subject(s) - methemoglobin , methemoglobinemia , sodium nitrite , ingestion , amyl nitrite , nitrite , hemoglobin , medicine , physiology , chemistry , toxicology , anesthesia , food science , organic chemistry , nitrate , biology
Nitrites are chemicals that are abundant in the environment, widely used as preservatives for meat, and in pharmaceuticals. Volatile products containing nitrites have been used recreationally for the euphoric effect associated with mild hypoxia. Dietary exposure to small amounts is considered harmless. Deaths by ingestion of nitrite salts are not common, but accidental exposure and as suicidal and homicidal agents have been noted. Death is a consequence of oxidation of hemoglobin ferrous (Fe +2 ) iron (Hb) to the ferric (Fe +3 ) form (methemoglobin, MetHb), causing a reduction in the oxygen‐carrying capacity of the blood. We report three cases of ingestion of sodium nitrite in two college students (one mildly decomposed) and one adult in early middle age. All of the decedents in these cases developed fatal methemoglobinemia. Sodium nitrite in chemical form was found near the bodies. MetHb was detected in the postmortem blood of each decedent. The MetHb concentrations in the two decedents with a short postmortem interval were less than MetHb concentrations reported in the current literature. The MetHb concentrations reported in the mildly decomposed person were greater than for the other two, but still less than the concentration previously considered lethal. The data from these cases indicate that levels of MetHb can vary widely in fatal cases, and should not be used as the sole criterion for determination of a death caused by sodium nitrite. Following a discussion of the cases, there is a review of the pathophysiology of MetHb production and a current literature review.

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