Introduction to toxicology and forensic sciences.pptx

VictorAkinseyeOluwat 75 views 22 slides May 30, 2024
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 22
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22

About This Presentation

Toxicology and Forensic Serology


Slide Content

Sample collection & Preservation 10 / 6 / 202 2 Toxicology & Forensic Serology 1 Dr. Aamir Ali Khan Assistant Professor PhD Biochemistry

Types o f Sample (Forensic Serology) 1 Sample Required for Forensic & toxicological Testing Blood Urine Stomach lavage/stomach aspirate Saliva, Stained cloth (blood/semen) Pubic/Vaginal swab (semen/DNA) Hair /Hair Follicles

5 / 7 / 2021 Toxicology & Forensic Serology Types Of Sample 2 Sample Collection After Post-Mortem Human Viscera Stomach Small intestine Liver Kidney Urine/blood/vitereous Heart

4 If Patient is Alive & suspicion of poisoning Material Quantity Remarks Vomit/stomach Aspirate 300 ml if less available Whole quantity S t omach washout 500 ml if less available Whole quantity Blood 10 ml Preferably more , 100 ml Urine 100-200 ml if less available Whole quantity *Sample should be properly preserved and labeled

5 Material Quantity Remarks Stomach Whole N/A Small intestine 100 cm adult 200 cm children, whole in infants, preferably tied end to end Liver 100 ml/whole Preferably the portion with gall bladder Spleen 500 mg 5cm thick slice of liver or whole in infants Kidneys Half in adult Whole in children Vitreous Maximum As much as can be withdrawn After autopsy specimen to be preserve irrespective of the nature of poison

5 / 7 / 2021 Toxicology & Forensic Serolog y 6 Additional sample required in special Circumstances Nature of Poison Material (to be preserved) Quantity Alcohol Peripheral blood Vitreous 10 ml Vitreous maximum Drug of abuse (barbiturates , opium etc ) Blood 10 ml Carbon Monoxide Blood 10 ml Heavy metal (chronic arsenic poisoning etc ) Bo n e Hair Nais Shaft of bone 10 cm Scalp hair with roots Toe and finger nails Inhalation/volatile substance Lung Air tigh container, tie off trachea Injected poison Skin, subcutaneous tissue/muscle from injection mark, similar tissue opposite side as control

7 Special Circumstances Material (to be preserved) Criminal Abortion Vagina, uterus, ovaries, any thing related to genital tract Decomposed Bodies Insect egg, maggots and pupa Exhumed bodies Soil samples from above, beneath & sides of coffin or any fluid in coffin . Control sample from distance away of coffin Embalmed bodies Embalming fluids, bone marrow Stained cloths Stained cloth and surrounding unstained area as control Special Circumstances

Preservation of forensic sample 8 Sample Condition Location Collection procedure Liquid (blood) Scene/hospital Collect in EDTA, through syringe or gauze/cotton and air dry it Clot (blood) Scene Transfer clot to glass tube add equal volume of saline, transfer to cotton cloth & dry Wet (blood) Cloth Air dry the cloth at room temperature and transfer to paper bag , avoid contamination Wet (blood) Object Air dry at room temperature and transfer to gauze / paper envelope Stain (blood) unm o v able surface e.g floor Collect by swab DO NOT SCRAP (double swab method)

Preservative for forensic sample 9 Sample Condition Preservative Urine Saturated soln/rectified spirit/hydrochloric acid Human Viscera's (liver , stomach , kidney, etc) Saturated saline if there is no chance of acid poison Rectified spirit if poisoned by acid Heart (histopathological examination) 10 percent formalin Maggots Dropped alive into boiling absolute alcoh o l or 10 % hot formalin Blood in carbon monoxide poisoning A layer of 1-2 cm liquid paraffin should be added immediately over the collected blood to avoid exposure to atmospheric oxygen

Preservation & Dispatch of viscera/samples 1 Human viscera are preserved in four different wide mouthed glass bottle Bottle should be filled 2/3 rd and some room for gases Bottle I: Stomach and intestine with its content Bottle II: kidney, liver and spleen Bottle III: may have special sample , heart, brain etc Vial : separate vial for each Blood and urine Bottle IV: Only preservative act as control

Sealing/packing of Samples 1 1 Lid of bottled should be tightly sealed and labeled Bottle will be placed in viscera box (wooden box) sealed and labeled again Key of box sealed in envelop, handover to police with proper receiving Police constable carry it to FSL lab alongwith Copy of panchanama, Autopsy report, requisition letter by MO to FSL Lab

Samples for microbiological examination

Re f e r ence 1 2 Medical jurisprudence, forensic medicine and toxicology, BV Subrahmanyam

Sexual Assault Evidence Collection 1 3 Dr. Aamir Ali Khan Assistant Professor PhD Biochemistry

Sexual Assault Evidence Collection 1 4 Sexual serious offense around the globe Forensic professionals focused on the identification, recovery, packing, and analysis of evidence. Evidence collection to DNA profiling, need timely approach & proper tools to utilize The sperm cells more resistant then somatic to biological degradation – Thanks to Sperm nucleus (protamine), protect from nucleases

16

18

19

20

21

Re f e r ence Biological Evidence Analysis in Cases of Sexual AssaultDO I:htt p ://dx.doi.or g /10.5772/intechopen.82164 5 / 7 / 2021