Affiliation:
1. University of Utah and ARUP Laboratories, Department of Pathology, Salt Lake City, UT
2. Washoe County Regional Medical Examiner's Office, and University of Nevada-Reno School of Medicine, Departments of Pathology and Pediatrics, Reno, NV.
Abstract
Abstract
The incidence of suicide by intentional nitrite ingestion has increased since 2017. Limited options exist for commercial laboratory analysis for nitrite/nitrate. This study investigates the use of urine dipsticks for screening at autopsy for potential toxicity with sodium nitrite and, less commonly, alkyl nitrite. Archived samples of blood, urine, vitreous fluid, and gastric contents from 4 sodium nitrite/nitrate cases, 3 alkyl nitrite cases, and 4 control cases were tested using dipsticks. A rapid, strong positive result for nitrite was in the vitreous fluid of all 4-sodium nitrite/nitrate cases, along with 2 positive urine and 1 positive gastric. The 2 alkyl nitrite inhalation toxicity cases had no positive results. One alkyl nitrite ingestion case had a positive urine. The 4 controls had negative urine: equivocal results in 2 vitreous, and 1 positive gastric. Urine dipsticks are a useful adjunct to laboratory testing for nitrite toxicity and provide a rapid, cost-effective tableside result that may guide the need for further testing. Vitreous fluid and urine appear to be the most reliable specimens, although testing of gastric liquid may be useful to corroborate oral ingestion. Dipsticks may not be a reliable adjunct for testing for alkyl nitrite toxicity via inhalation route, likely due to the much lower nitrite concentration compared to nitrite ingestion cases.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference17 articles.
1. Asphyxiants;Emerg Med Clin North Am,2015
2. Severe methemoglobinemia and death from intentional sodium nitrite ingestions;J Emerg Med,2020
3. Sodium nitrite intoxication and death: summarizing evidence to facilitate diagnosis;Int J Environ Res Public Health,2022
4. Lessons of the month 3: intravenous poppers abuse: case report, management and possible complications;Clin Med (Lond),2020
5. Increasing use of sodium nitrite in suicides—an emerging trend;Forensic Sci Med Pathol,2022