Strychnine poisoning can be fatal to humans and other animals and can occur by inhalation, swallowing or absorption through eyes or mouth. It produces some of the most dramatic and painful symptoms of any known toxic reaction, making it quite noticeable and a common choice for assassinations and poison attacks. For this reason, strychnine poisoning is often portrayed in literature and film, such as the murder mysteries written by Agatha Christie.[1]

Strychnine poisoning
Strychnine
SpecialtyEmergency medicine Edit this on Wikidata
ComplicationsLactic acidosis, Hyperthermia, Rhabdomyolysis
Usual onset10–20 minutes after exposure
CausesExposure to strychnine
Diagnostic method1–30 mg/L strychnine in blood
MedicationAnticonvulsants

The probable lethal oral dose in humans is 1.5 to 2 mg/kg.[2] Similarly, the median lethal dose for dogs, cats, and rats ranges from 0.5 to 2.35 mg/kg.[3]

Presentation in humans

edit

Ten to twenty minutes after exposure, the body's muscles begin to spasm, starting with the head and neck in the form of trismus and risus sardonicus. The spasms then spread to every muscle in the body, with nearly continuous convulsions, and get worse at the slightest stimulus. The convulsions progress, increasing in intensity and frequency until the backbone arches continually. Convulsions lead to lactic acidosis, hyperthermia and rhabdomyolysis. These are followed by postictal depression. Death comes from asphyxiation caused by paralysis of the neural pathways that control breathing, or by exhaustion from the convulsions. The subject usually dies within 2–3 hours after exposure.

One medical student in 1896 described the experience in a letter to The Lancet:

Three years ago I was reading for an examination, and feeling "run down". I took 10 minims of strychnia solution (B.P.) with the same quantity of dilute phosphoric acid well diluted twice a day. On the second day of taking it, towards the evening, I felt a tightness in the "facial muscles " and a peculiar metallic taste in the mouth. There was great uneasiness and restlessness, and I felt a desire to walk about and do something rather than sit still and read. I lay on the bed and the calf muscles began to stiffen and jerk. My toes drew up under my feet, and as I moved or turned my head flashes of light kept darting across my eyes. I then knew something serious was developing, so I crawled off the bed and scrambled to a case in my room and got out (fortunately) the bromide of potassium and the chloral. I had no confidence or courage to weigh them, so I guessed the quantity-about 30 gr. [30 grains, about 2 grams] bromide of potassium and 10 gr. chloral-put them in a tumbler with some water, and drank it off. My whole body was in a cold sweat, with anginous attacks in the precordial region, and a feeling of "going off." I did not call for medical aid, as I thought that the symptoms were declining. I felt better, but my lower limbs were as cold as ice, and the calf muscles kept tense and were jerking. There was no opisthotonos, only a slight stiffness at the back of the neck. Half an hour later, as I could judge, I took the same quantity of bromide, potassium and chloral– and a little time after I lost consciousness and fell into a " profound sleep," awaking in the morning with no unpleasant symptoms, no headache, &c., but a desire " to be on the move " and a slight feeling of stiffness in the jaw.

These worked off during the day.[4]

Treatment

edit

There is no antidote for strychnine poisoning.[5] Strychnine poisoning demands aggressive management with early control of muscle spasms, intubation for loss of airway control, toxin removal (decontamination), intravenous hydration and potentially active cooling efforts in the context of hyperthermia as well as hemodialysis in kidney failure (strychnine has not been shown to be removed by hemodialysis).[6] Treatment involves oral administration of activated charcoal, which adsorbs strychnine within the digestive tract; unabsorbed strychnine is removed from the stomach by gastric lavage, along with tannic acid or potassium permanganate solutions to oxidize strychnine.[7]

Activated charcoal

edit

Activated charcoal is a substance that can bind to certain toxins in the digestive tract and prevent their absorption into the bloodstream.[8] The effectiveness of this treatment, as well as how long it is effective after ingestion, are subject to debate.[9][10][11] According to one source, activated charcoal is only effective within one hour of poison being ingested, although the source does not regard strychnine specifically.[12] Other sources specific to strychnine state that activated charcoal may be used after one hour of ingestion, depending on dose and type of strychnine-containing product.[13][10] Therefore, other treatment options are generally favoured over activated charcoal.[10][14]

The use of activated charcoal is considered dangerous in patients with tenuous airways or altered mental states.[15]

Other treatments

edit

Most other treatment options focus on controlling the convulsions that arise from strychnine poisoning. These treatments involve keeping the patient in a quiet and darkened room,[16] anticonvulsants such as phenobarbital or diazepam,[6] muscle relaxants such as dantrolene,[17] barbiturates and propofol,[18] and chloroform or heavy doses of chloral, bromide, urethane or amyl nitrite.[19][20][21][22] If a poisoned person is able to survive for 6 to 12 hours subsequent to initial dose, they have a good prognosis.[6]

The sine qua non of strychnine toxicity is the "awake" seizure, in which tonic-clonic activity occurs but the patient is alert and oriented throughout and afterwards.[23] Accordingly, George Harley (1829–1896) showed in 1850 that curare (wourali) was effective for the treatment of tetanus and strychnine poisoning.

Detection in biological specimens

edit

Strychnine is easily quantitated in body fluids and tissues using instrumental methods in order to confirm a diagnosis of poisoning in hospitalized victims or to assist in the forensic investigation of a case of fatal overdosage. The concentrations in blood or urine of those with symptoms are often in the 1–30 mg/L range.[24]

Strychnine toxicity in animals

edit

Strychnine poisoning in animals occurs usually from ingestion of baits designed for use against rodents (especially gophers and moles) and coyotes. Rodent baits are commonly available over-the-counter, but coyote baits are illegal in the United States. However, since 1990 in the United States most baits containing strychnine have been replaced with zinc phosphide baits.[25] The most common domestic animal to be affected is the dog, either through accidental ingestion or intentional poisoning. The onset of symptoms is 10 to 120 minutes after ingestion.[26] Symptoms include seizures, a "sawhorse" stance, and opisthotonus (rigid extension of all four limbs). Death is usually secondary to respiratory paralysis. Treatment is by detoxification using activated charcoal, pentobarbital for the symptoms, and artificial respiration for apnea.

In most western nations a special license is needed to use and possess strychnine for agricultural use.

Notable instances

edit

The most notable incidents which probably involved strychnine poisoning, are listed here.

  • Alexander the Great may have been poisoned by strychnine in contaminated wine in 323 BC.[27]
  • Christiana Edmunds, the "Chocolate Cream Poisoner", laced chocolates with strychnine. She poisoned a number of people and murdered a four-year-old boy in Brighton in the 1870s.[28]
  • Emeline Meaker murdered her husband's eight-year-old niece Alice by lacing her drink with strychnine. As Alice convulsed from the effects of the poison, Meaker held her hand over Alice's mouth to muffle her cries until the girl was dead. Emeline Meaker was executed for Alice's murder in 1883.
  • Margot Begemann, a friend of Vincent van Gogh, attempted suicide by ingesting strychnine in 1884.[29]
  • In the late 19th century, serial killer Thomas Neill Cream used strychnine to murder several prostitutes on the streets of London.
  • Walter Horsford was hanged in 1898 for murdering his cousin with strychnine, to whom he'd sent it on the pretence it was an otherwise harmless abortifacient. He was implicated in two other murders which also involved mailing it to women who suspected they were pregnant by him.
  • Belle Gunness of La Porte, Indiana, also known as "Lady Bluebeard", allegedly used strychnine to murder some of her victims at the turn of the 20th century.[30]
  • Jane Stanford, co-founder of Stanford University and wife of California governor Leland Stanford, died from strychnine poisoning in 1905. Her last recorded words were "My jaws are stiff. This is a horrible death to die."[31] Her murderer was never identified.
  • Early 20th-century Portuguese poet and novelist Mário de Sá-Carneiro committed suicide via strychnine poisoning in 1916 aged 25.
  • French inventor Jean-Pierre Vaquier poisoned Alfred Jones, the husband of his lover Mabel Jones, by putting strychnine in his hangover cure in Byfleet, Surrey, in 1924. Vaquier was hanged for the crime.
  • Hubert Chevis, a lieutenant in the British Army, died in suspicious circumstances after eating partridge laced with strychnine at Blackdown Camp, Surrey, in 1931. The poisoner was never identified.
  • Yoshio Nishimura, a prominent Japanese expatriate and president of the Japanese Association, died of strychnine poisoning shortly after arriving at police headquarters in Singapore for questioning by Special Branch in 1934. The coroner rendered an open verdict.[32] The incident was speculated to be connected to espionage.[33][34]
  • In 1938, Delta Blues legend Robert Johnson died after drinking a bottle of whiskey which was allegedly laced with strychnine. This account of Johnson's death is disputed, as he died several days after the alleged poisoning.[35]
  • Oskar Dirlewanger, the notorious leader of the SS Sturmbrigade Dirlewanger in the Second World War, was known to have murdered several Jewish women by stripping them naked and having them injected with strychnine. He and his officers then watched them convulse until death, just for their entertainment.
  • Irene Bates, mother of possible Zodiac Killer victim Cheri Jo Bates, died of strychnine poisoning in early July, 1969.[36] She had been living in the city of Riverside, California.
  • On April 9, 1973, Rev. Jimmy Ray Williams and Buford Pack ingested strychnine during a signs following religious service in the Holiness Church of God in Jesus Name in Carson Springs, Tennessee. They both refused medical treatment and died as a result of strychnine poisoning.[37]
  • Carolyn Nadine Davis died of strychnine poisoning in mid-July, 1973.[38] She is included among the Santa Rosa Hitchhiker Murder victims.
  • In October 1987, successful wax museum owner Patsy Wright died from taking cold medicine laced with strychnine. The story was featured on a segment of Unsolved Mysteries, and it is suggested that someone very close to Wright knew her habit of taking nighttime cold medicine when she had trouble sleeping and laced her cold medicine with strychnine. The case remains unsolved.
  • A woman in San Diego, California, was poisoned with strychnine by her husband in 1990. Though she dialed 911, she did not mention her name or address, and rescue workers had difficulty locating the victim. Persistence on the part of the dispatcher and the rescue workers allowed them to locate and extract the victim, but she eventually died in the hospital.[39]
  • Turgut Özal, 8th president of the Republic of Turkey, was said to have been assassinated in 1993 by strychnine poisoning.[40][41][42] A special investigation into the former president's death was commissioned. His body was exhumed for testing in 2012, but the results were inconclusive.[43]
  • In 2008, Hannes Hirtzberger, the Mayor of Spitz in Lower Austria, was reported to have been poisoned by local wine producer Helmut Osberger using strychnine. Hirtzberger barely survived and suffered permanent disability.[44]
  • The body of David Lytton was found on Saddleworth Moor, northwest England, in December 2015 after he consumed a lethal dose of strychnine. His identity remained a mystery until January 2017.

In folklore

edit
  • Mount Chocorua in the White Mountains of New Hampshire is named for a Native American Chief who reputedly died near the summit after being hunted by a posse in response to a killing spree he went on. One account says that the cause of his attacks was the death of his young son from an accidental dose of strychnine while in the care of a friendly white settler. [citation needed]
  • Some Pentecostal snake handlers in the United States claim to have drunk strychnine in order to demonstrate their faith, following a Biblical passage: "They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them..."Mark 16:18[45]

In music

edit
  • In "Cyanide Sweet Tooth Suicide", Shinedown mentions a woman addicted to substances taking strychnine.
  • In his song "I'm Gonna Kill You", Hank Green sings about wanting to put someone on a strychnine diet.
  • In "The End of All Things To Come", Mudvayne sings about killing the entire world with strychnine.
  • The Sonics' song "Strychnine" (later covered by The Cramps and The Fuzztones), is about the consumption of strychnine.
  • In the song "You Love Us" by Manic Street Preachers, strychnine is mentioned.
  • Strychnine is mentioned in Hannah Fury's song "The Necklace of Marie Antoinette".
  • Tom Lehrer's song "Poisoning Pigeons in The Park" mentions feeding strychnine to a pigeon.
  • In "Composing" from Boys Night Out's concept album Trainwreck, The Patient poisons his entire family at the dinner table with strychnine.
  • In "Visions", Twisted Insane mentions strychnine twice.
  • In "The Bomb Song", Darwin Deez sings about people being sick from strychnine in the water.
  • Strychnos nux-vomica, a natural source of strychnine, is mentioned in "Hill of the Poison Tree", by death metal band Miseration.
  • Strychnine.213, the sixth studio album by Belgian death metal band Aborted, takes its title from strychnine.
  • "I Killed Robert Johnson" by The Stone Foxes mentions killing a man with strychnine.
  • Immortal Technique in the song "That's What It Is".
  • Yeasayer mentions, "deadly quaker buttons" in the song "I Am Chemistry", these are the seeds of the strychnine tree (*Strychnos nux-vomica L.).
  • Graham Parker song Harridan of Yore contains the lyrics A tiny vial of strychnine hung around her neck"
  • Brazilian artist Elis Regina in the song "Tiro Ao Álvaro" sings to the subject that "teu olhar mata mais do...que veneno estriquinina", literally "your gaze kills more than strychnine poison".
  • In "Coyote, My Little Brother," American folksinger Peter La Farge sings how the environment has been "strychnined" to kill off coyote populations.
  • In The Mountain Goats song "An Antidote for Strychnine" the narrator sings about trying to find an antidote to being poisoned by strychnine.

Fictional instances

edit

Strychnine has also served as an inspiration in several books, movies and TV series.

In literature

edit
  • In William S. Burroughs novel Naked Lunch, strychnine is described as a "hot shot", a poisonous shot of heroin sold to informants.
  • In Anne of Green Gables Miss Cuthbert is warned against adopting an orphan girl with a story about a girl who poisoned her entire adopted family by putting strychnine in the well.
  • In Agatha Christie's novel The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Mrs. Emily Inglethorp was killed by strychnine poisoning.
  • In Agatha Christie's short story The Coming of Mr Quin, Mr Appleton died of strychnine poisoning.
  • In Agatha Christie's story How Does Your Garden Grow?, Miss Amelia Barrowby was killed by strychnine poisoning.
  • The Joker makes a cameo appearance in the DC Comics Elseworld graphic novel Gotham by Gaslight as a serial killer who tries to kill himself with strychnine; the poison causes muscle contractions that leave him with a permanent grin. Additionally, a derivative of strychnine is cited as a key ingredient in the Joker's deadly toxic gas in the main continuity.
  • In the James Herriott novels All Creatures Great and Small (1972) and All Things Wise and Wonderful (1977), the main character/local veterinarian deals with several victims of strychnine poisoning when a dog-killer attacks the neighborhood dogs.
  • In "The Fox Hunter" chapter of William Le Queux's Secrets of the Foreign Office, a strychnine derivative is suspected in the murder of Beatrice Graham and the attempted murder of the protagonist Duckworth Drew. The poison was applied to pins concealed in Graham's fur shawl and Drew's hotel towel.
  • In Gabriel García Márquez's novel One Hundred Years of Solitude, Colonel Aureliano Buendía survived strychnine poisoning.
  • Herb in Die Softly by Christopher Pike.
  • In Peter Robinson's novel Cold Is the Grave, Chief Constable Riddle's daughter, Emily, is accidentally killed by cocaine laced with a lethal dose of strychnine.
  • In Hans Scherfig's novel Stolen Spring, a high school student kills his teacher with a strychnine-tainted malt drop.
  • In the manga Spiral: Suiri no Kizuna (by Kyou Shirodaira and illustrated by Eita Mizuno), main character Ayumu Narumi takes strychnine after he is threatened by Rio Takeuchi to test his luck in a game.
  • In The Sign of the Four by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, where Bartholomew Sholto is killed by a poison dart. Dr. Watson confirms it was strychnine poisoning, causing tetanus, thus the devilish grin on the dead Sholto's face.
  • In The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells, the Invisible Man relates that he took strychnine as a sleeping aid. "Strychnine," he says, "is a grand tonic...to take the flabbiness out of a man."
  • In The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, the Saint-Mérans and the servant Barrois are consecutively poisoned to death having ingested beverages containing strychnine. The death of Barrois is depicted with symptoms of acute convulsions, asphyxia, severe pain, ringing in the ears and visual glares that are precipitated by touch.
  • In The Anubis Gates the protagonist combats strychnine poisoning by eating ash and cinder of a fireplace, remembering that carbon neutralizes strychnine from stomach.
  • In "Ghoul" (1987), a serial killer police procedural by Michael Slade, a woman is essentially tortured to death by strychnine poisoning. She is tied spread-eagle on a waterbed by ropes as she suffers escalating muscle spasms. The undulations of the fluid mattress encourages more and more agonizing spasms until death ensues. Police detectives examining the crime scene later note how rope loops tied to the bedposts were flattened by the force put upon them by the victim's contortions.
  • In Stephen King's novel Mr. Mercedes, Brady Hartsfield plans to poison a dog using hamburger laced with strychnine-based gopher poison. His mother finds and eats the hamburger herself, and Brady comes home to find her suffering agonizing convulsions. When she dies, her mouth is twisted into a grin.
  • In Jack London's short story "The Story of Jees Uck", Neil Bonner is poisoned by eating biscuits laced with strychnine by Amos Pentley. Neil survives and sends Amos into the frozen wilderness to his death.
  • In Jack London's short story "Just Meat", partners-in-crime Matt and Jim successfully steal $500,000 of diamonds and pearls from an unscrupulous jewel merchant. Overcome by greed, both characters want to eliminate the other and unknowingly poison each other with strychnine.
  • In Jack London's short story "Moon-Face", the unnamed protagonist/narrator develops a deep and obsessive hate for his neighbor who is always cheerful even under the most dire situations. He poisons the neighbor's dog with strychnine and beefsteak in an effort to make him even the least bit unhappy. The neighbor, despite the death of his dog, continues to be unreasonably merry and joyful, forcing the protagonist to create a devious plan.

Onscreen, in film

edit
  • A Blueprint for Murder (1953) is about how a stepmother is stopped after beginning to kill her family members for insurance money.
  • Norman Bates' mother and her lover were killed with strychnine in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960). The sheriff comments: "Ugly way to die." The source book by Robert Bloch provides additional details about the strychnine murders.[46]
  • In J. Lee Thompsons's movie Cape Fear (1962), Max Cady poisons Sam Bowden's dog with strychnine.
  • At the end of the movie Office Space (1999), Milton mentions to a waiter: "And yes, I won't be leaving a tip, 'cause I could... I could shut this whole resort down. Sir? I'll take my traveler's checks to a competing resort. I could write a letter to your board of tourism and I could have this place condemned. I could put... I could put... strychnine in the guacamole. There was salt on the glass, BIG grains of salt."
  • In Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014), Madame Desgoffe-und-Taxis is found dead by strychnine poisoning. Later, a bottle labeled "strychnine poison" is seen on the desk of an assassin in her son Dmitri's employ.
  • In Rituparno Ghosh's Bengali film Shubho Mahurat (2003) (an adaptation of Agatha Christie's The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side), veteran actress Padmini Chowdhury (played by Sharmila Tagore) commits a series of murders by variously administering strychnine on the victims. Upon being exposed by Ranga Pishima (played by Rakhee Gulzar) Padmini also commits suicide using strychnine
  • In the Bollywood film Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! (2015), council member Gajanand Sikdaar is killed by adding strychnine to his breakfast just before he can reveal the murderer's name to the protagonist, Bakshy. A bottle of strychnine is found in his nephew, Sukumar's room. It is later revealed that his mistress, Angoori Devi had poisoned him and framed Sukumar on orders of her beloved Yang Guang.
  • In the film The Wild Geese (1978), Roger Moore's character Shawn Flynn poisoned the son of a crime lord by making him eat the drugs he had him transport having laced them with Strychnine.
  • In the film Red Dog (2011), the red kelpie was believed to be poisoned deliberately in 1979 by strychnine.
  • In Steven Spielberg's Jaws (1975), Mr. Hooper planned to kill the shark with an injection of strychnine nitrate administered through a shark dart.
  • In the film Tracks (2013), the main character's dog Diggity has to be put down after it is implied that she ate strychnine laced bait intended to kill wild dingos.

Onscreen, in television

edit
  • The murder in the Monk episode "Mr. Monk and the Secret Santa" is carried out by poisoning a bottle of port with strychnine.
  • In New York Undercover season 4, episode 10 – "Sign o' the Times" – a serial killer kills young men at raves by giving them strychnine-laced Ecstasy.
  • Inmates in the popular TV series The Wire were given cocaine and heroin doses laced with strychnine.
  • In season 9 of The Office Dwight tells Angela that his Aunt had poisoned her nurse with Strychnine.
  • In season 4 of "The Glades" episode "Glade-iators!" the victim is poisoned with moisturizer laced with strychnine-based rat poison.
  • In season 3 of “Father Brown” episode “The Time Machine” The murderer has used strychnine to kill two people and make it look like suicide.
  • In season 6 of "ER" episode "Humpty Dumpty" a patient comes in with Strychnine poisoning, as diagnosed by Dr. Gabriel Lawrence.
  • In season 4 of "Game of Thrones" episode "The Lion and the Rose" King Joffrey dies from poison. The symptoms resemble those of Strychnine poisoning.[47]
  • In the tenth episode of The Haunting of Hill House, Luke Crain nearly dies after injecting himself with strychnine rat poison while under the spell of a malevolent ghost.
  • In season 8B of the popular Australian prison series Wentworth, inmate Sheila Bausch (Marta Dusseldorp) is given one final choice by fellow inmate Lou Kelly (Kate Box) – ingest a vial of strychnine, or have her throat slit. Bausch opts for the former. Bausch is subsequently euthanised by Marie Winter (Susie Porter) to end the pain and suffering caused by the poisoning.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Killed by Agatha Christie: Strychnine and the detective novel". www.open.edu. Open university. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  2. ^ E., Gosselin, Robert (1984). Clinical toxicology of commercial products. Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 0-683-03632-7. OCLC 252306964.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "CDC - Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH): Strychnine - NIOSH Publications and Products". www.cdc.gov. 2018-11-02. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  4. ^ Sandall, Leondard, (28 March 1896). "An Overdose of Strychnine" The Lancet, 147(3787):887
  5. ^ "Strychnine: Biotoxin | NIOSH | CDC". www.cdc.gov. 2023-05-26. Retrieved 2024-08-12.
  6. ^ a b c "CDC – The Emergency Response Safety and Health Database: Biotoxin: Strychnine – NIOSH". www.cdc.gov. Archived from the original on 2015-12-21. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  7. ^ Patocka, Jiri (December 2015). Gupta, Ramesh C. (ed.). "Strychnine". Handbook of Toxicology of Chemical Warfare Agents (2nd ed.). Elsevier Inc.: 215–222. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-800159-2.00017-8. ISBN 978-0-12-800159-2 – via ResearchGate.
  8. ^ "Charcoal, Activated (Oral Route) Proper Use - Mayo Clinic". Mayo Clinic. Archived from the original on 2024-02-06. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  9. ^ Shadnia S, Moiensadat M, Abdollahi M (April 2004). "A case of acute strychnine poisoning". Veterinary and Human Toxicology. 46 (2): 76–9. PMID 15080207. S2CID 23272093.
  10. ^ a b c Otter J, D'Orazio JL (August 7, 2023). Strychnine Toxicity. StatPearls. PMID 29083795. NCBI NBK459306.
  11. ^ Cooney DO (August 1995). "Evaluation of the US pharmacopeia adsorption tests for activated charcoals and proposals for changes". Veterinary and Human Toxicology. 37 (4): 371–7. PMID 8540235. S2CID 67975596.
  12. ^ Lapus, Robert Michael (April 2007). "Activated charcoal for pediatric poisonings: the universal antidote?" (PDF). Current Opinion in Pediatrics. 19 (2): 216–222. doi:10.1097/MOP.0b013e32801da2a9. PMID 17496769. S2CID 6728477. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-02-06. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  13. ^ Hayden JW, Comstock EG (1975). "Use of Activated Charcoal in Acute Poisoning". Clinical Toxicology. 8 (5): 515–533. doi:10.3109/15563657508988096. PMID 770060. S2CID 42542989. Archived from the original on 2024-03-08. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  14. ^ "CDC Strychnine | Facts about Strychnine | Public Health Emergency Preparedness& Response". 16 January 2020. Archived from the original on 6 February 2024. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  15. ^ Smith BA (1990). "Strychnine poisoning". The Journal of Emergency Medicine. 8 (3): 321–325. doi:10.1016/0736-4679(90)90013-L. PMID 2197324.
  16. ^ "Drugs and Poisons Fact Sheet: Strychnine Permits - What you need to know". Queensland Health. Retrieved 12 August 2024.
  17. ^ "Final Diagnosis -- Case 550". path.upmc.edu. Retrieved 2024-08-12.
  18. ^ Lages A, Pinho J, Alves R, Capela C, Lourenço E, Lencastre L (16 May 2013). "Strychnine Intoxication: A Case Report". Journal of Medical Cases. 4 (6): 385–388. doi:10.4021/jmc1189w. S2CID 54707248.
  19. ^ Cushny AR (January 1, 1940). Pharmacology and Therapeutics (12 ed.). Lea & Febiger. ASIN B000SNDA1U.
  20. ^ Buckley S (September 1873). "Case of Strychnine Poisoning Successfully Treated by Atropine". Edinburgh Medical Journal. 19 (3): 211–213. PMC 5315983. PMID 29640880. S2CID 4760315.
  21. ^ "The Treatment of Strychnine Poisoning". Journal of the American Medical Association. 98 (23): 1992. 1932. doi:10.1001/jama.1932.02730490038013. Archived from the original on 2024-02-06. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  22. ^ "Strychnine and Vomit: The Untold Story of Past US Addiction Treatments". 8 September 2021. Archived from the original on 6 February 2024. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  23. ^ Boyd RE, Brennan PT, Deng JF, Rochester DF, Spyker DA (March 1983). "Strychnine poisoning. Recovery from profound lactic acidosis, hyperthermia, and rhabdomyolysis". The American Journal of Medicine. 74 (3): 507–512. doi:10.1016/0002-9343(83)90999-3. PMID 6829597. S2CID 3222667.
  24. ^ R. Baselt, Disposition of Toxic Drugs and Chemicals in Man, 8th edition, Biomedical Publications, Foster City, CA, 2008, pp. 1448–1450.
  25. ^ Ettinger, Stephen J.; Feldman, Edward C. (1995), Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine (4th ed.), W.B. Saunders Company, ISBN 0-7216-6795-3
  26. ^ Beasley, V. (1999). "Toxicants Associated with Seizures". Veterinary Toxicology. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
  27. ^ Graham Phillips (2004). Alexander the Great. Murder in Babylon. Virgin Books, 2004. p. 239ff. ISBN 1-85227-134-5.
  28. ^ "Christiana Edmunds". Old Police Cells Museum. Retrieved 29 July 2020.
  29. ^ Naifeh, Steven; Smith, Gregory White (2011). Van Gogh: The Life. New York: Random House. pp. 400–403. ISBN 978-0-375-50748-9.
  30. ^ Kridel, Kristen (February 12, 2008), "A century-old mystery: Did serial killer fake her death?", Chicago Tribune
  31. ^ Cutler, Robert (2003), The Mysterious Death of Jane Stanford, Stanford University Press, ISBN 0-8047-4793-8
  32. ^ "Nishimura Mystery Still Unsolved". The Straits Times. 15 December 1934.
  33. ^ "Allegations of Spying?". The Straits Times. 9 December 1934.
  34. ^ Ruder, Stephen (29 April 2019). "Espionage Double Cross in Singapore". Warfare History Network. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
  35. ^ Graves, Tom; LaVere, Steve (2008). Crossroads: The Life and Afterlife of Blues Legend Robert Johnson. Demers Books LLC. pp. 39–43. ISBN 978-0-9816002-0-8. The tale most often told about how Johnson met his fate is that he was poisoned by a jealous husband who put strychnine in his whiskey.
  36. ^ Death certificate for Irene Margaret Bates. Registration district: 3318. Certificate number: 2234. Recorded July 8, 1969. Riverside City, Riverside County.
  37. ^ "2 Drink Strychnine At Service and Die In Display of Faith". The New York Times. April 10, 1973.
  38. ^ George, Gray (2016). Lost Coast Highway (1st ed.). Self-published with CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. pp. 195–196. ISBN 9781547105472.
  39. ^ D. Bellandi. "Husband Arrested in Woman's Poisoning Death". Los Angeles Times, August 25, 1990. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-08-25-me-818-story.html
  40. ^ "Turkish ex-president's autopsy fuels poisoning speculation". Chicago Tribune. 4 November 2012.
  41. ^ "Late Turkish President Turgut Özal : Had he been poisoned indeed ? Confusing reports from forensics – NationalTurk". 2 November 2012.
  42. ^ Anderson, L. V. (5 November 2012). "These Old Bones". Slate.
  43. ^ Today's Zaman, 20 June 2013, Independent expert evaluation casts doubt on Özal report Archived 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Rogers, David (February 28, 2008), "Suspect in poisoned-mayor case has been arrested", Wiener Zeitung, archived from the original on March 19, 2008
  45. ^ Dennis Covington, Salvation on Sand Mountain: Snake Handling and Redemption in Southern Appalachia (Reading, MA.: Addison-Wesley, 1995).
  46. ^ Bloch, Robert (1959). Psycho (2010 ed.). United States: The Overlook Press. pp. 169, 173. ISBN 978-1-59020-335-4.
  47. ^ "The Poison That Killed A Major Game Of Thrones Character Is Real". Business Insider.
edit