Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
103551 Legal Medicine 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Benzene and CO-Hb concentrations are typically positively correlated in fire victims.•We report 3 fire-related cases in which these concentrations were not correlated.•High CO-Hb concentrations without hydrocarbons indicate carbon monoxide inhalation before a fire started.

In our institutes, we perform a quantitative evaluation of volatile hydrocarbons in post-mortem blood in all fatal fire-related cases using headspace gas chromatography mass spectrometry. We previously reported that benzene concentrations in the blood were positively correlated with carbon monoxide-hemoglobin (CO-Hb) concentrations in fire-related deaths. Here, we present 3 cases in which benzene concentrations in the blood were not correlated with CO-Hb concentrations. A high CO-Hb concentration without a hydrocarbon component, such as benzene, indicates that the deceased inhaled carbon monoxide that was not related to the smoke from the fire. Comparing volatile hydrocarbons with CO-Hb concentrations can provide more information about the circumstances surrounding fire-related deaths. We are currently convinced that this is the best method to detect if carbon monoxide poisoning occurred before a house fire started.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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