Abstract
The study focuses on a series of 16 fatal cases in which carbamazepine and its two major metabolites (10,11-epoxide and 10,11-dihydroxycarbamazepine) were detected in body fluids and tissues collected at autopsy. The drug may be implicated in a number of deaths; however, most of these are multiple-drug intoxications with a particular contribution of ethanol. The investigations concerning toxicological findings are a source of toxicological postmortem data and show the differences in metabolism rate as depending on the concentration level of carbamazepine and xenobiotics found in the autopsy specimen during the postmortem investigation of a body.
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CITATION STYLE
Klys, M., Bystrowska, B., & Bujak-Gizycka, B. (2003). Postmortem toxicology of carbamazepine. Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 27(4), 243–248. https://doi.org/10.1093/jat/27.4.243
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