Abstract

Aconitine belongs to the Aconitum alkaloids and is a natural toxic substance. Aconitine has been used as a traditional medicine in East Asian culture. Today, aconitine is still in use with or without a prescription, in the Republic of Korea. Here we present a case report of accidental death due to acute aconitine poisoning. An 81-year-old woman ingested liquid that had been heat extracted from the root of the Aconitum plant; she presented to the emergency room 1h after ingestion. Her electrocardiogram showed irregular ventricular arrhythmias including ventricular tachycardia; she progressed to cardiac arrest. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation and anti-arrhythmic drugs were administered, but the patient did not survive. An autopsy was performed 2days postmortem. Toxicological analysis was performed, and aconitine was detected by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. The antemortem blood concentration of aconitine was 39.1ng/ml and the concentrations of aconitine in the postmortem cardiac blood, peripheral blood, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), pericardial fluid, and urine were 21.1ng/ml, 28.6ng/ml, 6.8ng/ml, 24.1ng/ml, and 67.4ng/ml, respectively. This is the first forensic case report of an aconitine poisoning death in the Republic of Korea with quantitative measurement of aconitine in the antemortem blood and various postmortem body fluids. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of the detection of aconitine in the CSF. These data about the distribution of aconitine in the antemortem blood and various postmortem body fluids is helpful for future aconitine poisoning death cases.

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