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    Subjects/Forensic Medicine/Post Mortem Techniques
    Post Mortem Techniques
    medium
    shield Forensic Medicine

    Which of the following is commonly used for preservation of viscera in toxicology autopsy?

    A. Rectified spirit
    B. Glycerin
    C. Formalin
    D. Saturated salt solution

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: D. Saturated salt solution Saturated salt solution (hypertonic saline, typically 10% NaCl) is the gold standard for preservation of viscera in toxicology autopsies in India and globally. The key discriminator is that toxicology requires preservation of chemical analytes (drugs, poisons, heavy metals) without introducing exogenous contaminants or causing chemical degradation. Saturated salt solution achieves this through osmotic dehydration of microbial cells, which arrests putrefaction and autolysis while maintaining the integrity of toxic substances. Unlike formalin, which chemically cross-links proteins and can interfere with chromatographic and spectroscopic analysis, salt solution preserves the native chemical state of poisons and drugs. It does not leach into tissues or alter the pH significantly, making it ideal for subsequent toxicological assays (GC-MS, HPLC, atomic absorption spectroscopy). In Indian forensic practice, particularly under RNTCP guidelines and as per Reddy's Forensic Medicine, saturated salt solution is preferred for viscera destined for chemical analysis. The solution prevents bacterial growth through osmotic stress while avoiding the formaldehyde interference that would compromise toxicology results. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Rectified spirit** — Rectified spirit (95% ethanol) causes tissue hardening and shrinkage, making histological examination difficult. More critically, it can leach or dissolve certain drugs and poisons, leading to loss of analytes and false-negative toxicology results. It is not used for viscera preservation in toxicology cases. **B. Glycerin** — Glycerin is a humectant used primarily for long-term preservation of anatomical specimens and museum preparations, not for toxicology. It does not prevent putrefaction effectively in the short term and can interfere with chemical analysis of poisons. It is not the standard for viscera preservation in forensic toxicology. **C. Formalin** — While formalin (formaldehyde solution) is excellent for general histopathology and prevents decomposition, it chemically cross-links proteins and can bind to drugs and toxins, rendering them undetectable by modern analytical methods (GC-MS, HPLC). This makes it unsuitable for toxicology viscera, where chemical integrity of the analyte is paramount. ## High-Yield Facts - **Saturated salt solution (10% NaCl)** is the standard preservative for viscera in toxicology autopsies because it prevents putrefaction without chemical interference. - **Formalin is contraindicated** in toxicology viscera because formaldehyde cross-links proteins and interferes with chromatographic detection of drugs and poisons. - **Osmotic dehydration** by hypertonic saline arrests microbial growth and autolysis while maintaining native chemical state of toxins. - **Rectified spirit causes tissue shrinkage** and can leach analytes, leading to false-negative toxicology results. - **Glycerin is used for museum specimens**, not for forensic toxicology preservation due to poor short-term antimicrobial efficacy. ## Mnemonics **SALT for TOX** **S**aturated salt solution for **TOX**icology viscera. Remember: Salt preserves without chemical interference (like salt-curing meat), whereas formalin chemically alters the poison molecules. **Formalin = Forensic Failure in Toxicology** Formalin fixes tissue but **fixes** (binds) the toxin too—making it invisible to GC-MS and HPLC. Use only for histology, never for toxicology viscera. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair formalin with "preservation" to trap students who think of general autopsy fixation rather than the specific requirement of toxicology analysis. The trap is conflating histopathological preservation with chemical analyte preservation—two different goals requiring different preservatives. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian medicolegal practice, when a death is suspected to be due to poisoning (pesticide, heavy metal, drug overdose), viscera must be preserved in saturated salt solution immediately and sealed with wax to maintain chain of custody. This is critical because many Indian poisoning cases (organophosphate pesticide suicides, arsenic poisoning) depend entirely on toxicology confirmation—formalin-preserved viscera would render the case unanalyzable and potentially lead to acquittal of the accused. _Reference: Reddy's Forensic Medicine & Toxicology (3rd ed.), Ch. 5 (Autopsy & Preservation); Parikh's Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence, Forensic Medicine & Toxicology, Ch. 7_

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