

Published: Journal of Analytical Toxicology, Volume
23,
Number 6,
October 1999,
pp.552-555
A Fatality Related to the Veterinary Anesthetic Telazol
Christopher J. Cording, Robert DeLuca, Thomas Camporese,
and Elizabeth Spratt
A 45-year-old male veterinarian was found dead in bed. Police investigation showed
no evidence of trauma or other suspicious circumstances. Autopsy was unremarkable
except for cardiomegaly and hepatosplenomegaly. Toxicological analysis revealed
the presence of Telazol and ketamine. Telazol is a veterinary anesthetic agent
that is composed of equal parts of tiletamine and zolazepam. Tiletamine is a disassociative
anesthetic similar to ketamine and phencyclidine, and zolazepam is a diazepine
derivative tranquilizer used to minimize the muscle hypertonicity and seizures
associated with tiletamine. Quantitation of tiletamine and zolazepam was performed
using gas chromatographymass spectrometry in the selected ion monitoring
mode following a solid-phase extraction. Postmortem blood, urine, and liver concentrations
of tiletamine were 295 ng/mL, 682 ng/mL, and 196 ng/g, respectively, whereas postmortem
concentrations of zolazepam for the same tissues were 1.71 µg/mL, 1.33 µg/mL,
and 15.5 µg/g, respectively. Blood and urine ketamine levels were 37 ng/mL
and 381 ng/mL, respectively. The cause of death was ruled an acute mixed drug
intoxication of tiletamine, zolazepam, and ketamine with the manner of death ruled
as unclassified.
Reproduction of editorial content
of this journal is prohibited without publishers
permission.
This article is available in its entirety by fax for $4.00 per page.
Visa or MasterCard accepted.
To order electronically click
here
or call: 847-647-2900 ext. 1323
or fax request to: 847-647-1155.
Please indicate JAT
volume and issue along with page numbers.
|
| Home
| Subscribe | Current Issue
| Back Issues | Search | Advertise | Other Publications
| Site Map |