Legal Medicine
Volume 5, Issue 1 , Pages 42-48, March 2003

Immunohistochemical study of myoglobin and oxidative injury-related markers in the kidney of methamphetamine abusers

Department of Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, The University of Tokushima, 3-18-15 Kuramoto, Tokushima 770-8503, Japan

Received 17 December 2002; received in revised form 10 January 2003; accepted 14 January 2003.

Abstract 

It is known that methamphetamine (MA) causes rhabdomyolysis, myoglobinuria, and acute renal failure. We conducted an immunohistochemical study on the kidney of 22 forensic autopsy cases in which MA had been detected. Myoglobin was positive in 17 cases. The concentration of the blood MA in the myoglobin-positive cases (8.39±3.43 μmol/dl) was higher than -negative cases (0.198±0.076 μmol/dl). And, the 70 kDa heat shock protein (HSP70), 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG), 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE), and Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) were also stained positively in five, ten, 11, nine cases of examined, respectively. In addition, 80% of HSP70-positive cases were myoglobin-positive. Myoglobin was also observed in 60% of 8-OH-dG-positive, in 82% of 4-HNE-positive, and in 78% of SOD-positive cases, respectively. Therefore, myoglobin rather than MA itself might induce oxidative damage. From these results, it was considered that MA abuse had caused the skeletal muscle damage before death. In forensic autopsy cases of drug abusers, the antemortem situation is not often known. The present research suggested that in addition to the measurement of the concentration of MA, immunohistochemical staining of myoglobin, HSP70, 8-OH-dG, 4-HNE, and SOD offers important information for the diagnosis of MA poisoning.

Keywords:  Methamphetamine, Kidney, Myoglobin, Oxidative injury, Immunohistochemistry

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PII: S1344-6223(03)00005-1

Legal Medicine
Volume 5, Issue 1 , Pages 42-48, March 2003