Treatise on Poisons by Sir Robert Christison
CHAPTER XXVII.
2464 words | Chapter 173
OF POISONING WITH OPIUM.
To the medical jurist opium is one of the most important of poisons;
since there is hardly any other whose effects come more frequently under
his cognizance. It is the poison most generally resorted to by the timid
to accomplish self-destruction, for which purpose it is peculiarly well
adapted on account of the gentleness of its operation. It has also been
often the source of fatal accidents, which naturally arise from its
extensive employment in medicine. It has likewise been long very
improperly employed to create amusement. And in recent times it has been
made use of to commit murder, and to induce stupor previous to the
commission of robbery. Mr. Burnett, in his work on Criminal Law, has
mentioned a trial for murder in 1800, in which the prisoners were
accused of having committed the crime by poisoning with opium; and
although a verdict of _not proven_ was returned, there is little doubt
that the deceased, an adult, was poisoned in the way supposed. A few
years ago, a remarkable trial took place at Paris, where poisoning was
alleged to have been effected by means of the alkaloid principle of
opium; and the prisoner, a young physician of the name of Castaing, was
condemned and executed.
In several parts of Britain during the last fifteen years many persons
have been brought into great danger by opium having been administered as
a narcotic to facilitate robbery; and some have actually been killed. In
December, 1828, a conviction was obtained in the Judiciary Court of
Edinburgh for this crime, in which instance the persons who had taken
the opium recovered. A fatal case, which was strongly suspected to be of
the same nature, was submitted to me by the sheriff of this county in
1828; but sufficient evidence could not be procured. In July, 1829, a
man Stewart and his wife were condemned, and subsequently executed for
the same crime, the person to whom they gave the opium having been
killed by it. And about a year afterwards a similar instance occurred at
Glasgow, for which a man Byers and his wife were condemned at the Autumn
Circuit of 1831.
SECTION I.—_Of the Chemical History and Tests of Opium._
Opium is the inspissated juice of the capsules of the _Papaver
somniferum_. It has a reddish-brown colour, and a glimmering lustre on a
fresh surface. It is soft and plastic when recent; but if pure, may be
dried so as to become brittle. Its smell is strong and quite peculiar.
It has a very bitter and most peculiar taste. In consequence of this
taste one would suppose it no easy matter to administer opium secretly.
The plan resorted to by thieves and robbers seems to be, to deaden the
sense of taste by strong spirits, and then to ply the person with porter
or ale drugged with laudanum, or the black drop, which possesses less
odour.
The following account of the chemical history of opium will be confined
in a great measure to the leading properties of the principles, in which
its active qualities are concentrated, or which are likely by their
chemical characters to supply proof of its presence.
The common solvents act readily on opium. Water dissolves its active
principles even at low temperatures. So does alcohol. So particularly do
the mineral and vegetable acids when much diluted. Ether removes from it
little else than one of its active principles, narcotine. By the action
of these agents are procured various preparations in common use.
_Laudanum_ is a spirituous infusion, and contains the active ingredients
of a twelfth part of its weight of opium. _Scotch Paregoric Elixir_, a
solution in ammoniated spirit, is only one-fifth of the strength of
laudanum; and _English Paregoric_, tincture of opium and camphor for its
chief ingredients, is four times weaker still. _Wine of opium_ contains
the soluble part of a sixteenth of its weight. The _black drop_ and
_Battley’s sedative liquor_ are believed to be solutions of opium in
vegetable acids, and to possess, the former four, the latter three times
the strength of laudanum. But their strength has been greatly
exaggerated; neither of them, according to my own experience, being
above half what is supposed. The juice and infusion of the garden poppy
are also powerfully narcotic, so as even to have caused death both when
given by the mouth and in the way of injection.[1677] Many other
pharmaceutic preparations contain opium.
If opium be infused in successive portions of cold water, the water
dissolves all its poisonous principles, and also a peculiar acid
possessing characteristic chemical properties. These principles are
separated by means of the alkalis, the alkaline carbonates, or the
alkaline earths. The most important of them are _morphia_, the chief
alkaloid of opium,—_narcotine_, a feeble poison, not an alkaloid,—a
peculiar acid, termed _meconic acid_,—and a _resinoid substance_. Other
crystalline principles also exist in opium, though apparently in too
small proportion either to affect its action or to be available in
medico-legal analysis as the means of detecting the drug. These are
codeïa, meconine, narceïne, paramorphia, and porphyroxine.
Of the various principles now indicated it is necessary to notice here
only morphia, narcotine, codeïa, porphyroxine and meconic acid. They
require mention either as being active poisons, or because a knowledge
of their leading characters may be useful in conducting a medico-legal
analysis in a case of poisoning with opium.
Meconic acid, as procured by evaporation, is usually in little scales of
a pale brown or yellowish tint, being rendered so by adhering resin or
extractive matter; but when nearly colourless, it forms long, extremely
delicate tabular crystals, which in mass have a fine silky appearance
like spermaceti. 1. When heated in a tube, it is partly decomposed, and
partly sublimed; and the sublimate condenses in filamentous, radiated
crystals. 2. When dissolved even in a very large quantity of water, the
solution acquires an intense cherry-red colour with the perchloride of
iron. The sublimed crystals have the same property. Only one other acid
is so affected, namely, the sulpho-cyanic, a very rare substance. It has
been repeatedly stated,[1678] that the redness produced by meconic acid
may be distinguished by the effect of an alkali, which is said to bleach
the colour produced by sulpho-cyanic acid, but to deepen the cherry-red
tint occasioned by the meconic. This is not correct; an alkali added to
the red solution of meconate of iron precipitates oxide of iron and
renders the liquid colourless. The best distinction yet proposed is the
following which has been suggested by Dr. Percy. Acidulate the red fluid
with sulphuric acid, drop in a bit of pure zinc, and suspend at the
mouth of the tube a bit of paper moistened with solution of acetate of
lead: If the redness be caused by sulpho-cyanic acid, hydrosulphuric
acid gas is evolved, and blackens the paper; but no such effect ensues,
it the redness be owing to meconic acid.[1679]—According to Dr. Pereira,
solutions of the acetates, an infusion of white mustard, decoctions of
Iceland moss, and of the _Gigantina helminthocorton_, besides other more
rare substances, are reddened, like solution of meconic acid, by the
salts of peroxide of iron.[1680] 3. The solution of meconic acid gives a
pale-green precipitate with the sulphate of copper, and, if the
precipitate is not too abundant, it is dissolved by boiling, but
reappears on cooling.
_Of the Tests for Morphia and its Salts._—Morphia, when pure, is in
small, beautiful, white crystals. Various forms have been ascribed to
it; but in the numerous crystallizations I have made, it has always
assumed when pure the form of a slightly flattened hexangular prism. It
has a bitter taste, but no smell.
A gentle heat melts it, and if the fluid mass is then allowed to cool, a
crystalline radiated substance is formed. A stronger heat reddens and
then chars the fused mass, white fumes of a peculiar odour are
disengaged, and at last the mass kindles and burns brightly.—Morphia is
very little soluble in water. It is more soluble, yet still sparingly
so, in ether. But its proper solvents are alcohol, or the diluted acids,
mineral as well as vegetable. All its solutions are intensely bitter,
and that in alcohol has an alkaline reaction.—From its solutions in the
acids crystallizable salts may be procured; and morphia may be separated
by the superior affinity of any of the inorganic alkalis; but it is
easily redissolved by an excess of potash.—Morphia when treated with
nitric acid is dissolved with effervescence, and becomes instantly
orange-red, which, if too much acid be used, changes quickly to yellow.
The coloration of morphia by nitric acid is a characteristic property;
which, however, it possesses in common with some other alkaloids, such
as brucia, and also strychnia when not quite pure. The change of colour
is said by some chemists to depend on adhering resinoid matter, and not
to be possessed by perfectly pure morphia; but this is a mistake. It is
probable that some other vegetable substances besides the three
alkaloids, morphia, brucia, and strychnia, may be turned orange-red by
nitric acid. Dr. Pereira says that oil of pimento undergoes the same
change.[1681]—When suspended in water, in the form of fine powder and
then treated with a drop or two of perchloride of iron containing little
or no free hydrochloric acid, it is dissolved and forms a deep blue
solution, the tint of which is more purely blue, the stronger the
solution, and the purer the morphia. This is a property even more
characteristic than the former, since no such effect is produced on any
other known alkaloid. Like the effect of nitric acid, it is said not to
be essential to morphia, but to depend on adhering resinoid matter; yet
the blue colour is always strongly produced with powdered morphia of
snowy-whiteness.—Another property by which morphia maybe also
distinguished is the decomposition of iodic acid. A solution of iodic
acid is turned brown either by morphia or its salts, owing to the
formation of iodine; and the test is so delicate that it affects a
solution containing a 7000th of morphia.[1682] So many other substances,
however, possess the property of disengaging iodine from iodic acid,
that little importance can be attached to this criterion.
_Acetate of Morphia_ is in some countries the common medicinal form for
administering morphia; but it has been almost entirely superseded in
this city by the hydrochlorate, since Dr. W. Gregory pointed out a cheap
mode of procuring that salt in a state of purity.[1683] The acetate is
in confused crystals, often of a brownish colour from impurities. The
stronger acids disengage acetic acid. The alkalis throw down morphia
from its solution in water. Nitric acid and perchloride of iron act on
it as on morphia itself.
_Hydrochlorate of Morphia._—The muriate or hydrochlorate must be
carefully attended to by the medical jurist, because it is extensively
used in medical practice instead of opium. As now prepared, it is
snowy-white and apparently pulverulent, but is in reality a congeries of
filiform crystals. It decrepitates slightly when heated, then melts, and
at the same time chars, exhaling a strong odour somewhat like that of
truffles. Nitric acid and perchloride of iron act on it as on morphia.
Boiling water dissolves fully its own weight, and very easily
three-fourths of its weight of hydrochlorate of morphia; and on cooling
down to 60° F. it retains seven parts per cent., and deposits the rest
in tufts of beautiful filiform crystals. The solution commonly employed
in medicine contains one per cent. of the salt. Nitric acid turns the
solution yellow, acting distinctly enough when the water contains a
hundredth, and perceptibly when it contains only a two-hundredth of its
weight. Perchloride of iron strikes a deep blue with a solution
containing a hundredth of its weight, very distinctly when the
proportion is a two-hundredth, and even perceptibly when it is only a
five-hundredth. A solution much more diluted than even the last has a
strong bitter taste. When moderately concentrated, morphia is
precipitated from it by the alkalis.
Of the preceding properties of morphia and its salts, those which
constitute the most characteristic tests are the effects of perchloride
of iron and of nitric acid on all of them, the effect of heat on
morphia, and the effect of an alkali on its solutions in acids.
_Of the Tests for Narcotine._—Narcotine is rather distinguished by
negative than by positive chemical properties. When pure, it is in
transparent colourless pearly crystals, which, as formed from alcohol,
may be either very flat, oblique, six-sided prisms, or oblong four-sided
tables obliquely bevelled on their sides. But when crystallized from
sulphuric ether the crystals are prisms with a rhombic base. They fuse
with heat, and concrete on cooling into a resinous-like mass. They are
soluble in ether, and fixed oil, less so in alcohol, insoluble in water
or the alkalis, very soluble in the diluted acids, but without effecting
neutralization; and if perfectly pure, they do not undergo the changes
produced on morphia by perchloride of iron or nitric acid. Few specimens
of narcotic, however, are so pure as not to render nitric acid yellow.
Care must be taken not to confound narcotine with morphia. When
crystallized together from alcohol and not quite pure, narcotine forms
tufts of pearly thin tabular crystals, while morphia is in short, thick,
sparkling prisms.
_Of Codeïa._—This substance is, like morphia, an alkaloid, capable of
combining with acids. It differs from morphia and narcotine in being
moderately soluble in water; and from this solution it may be
crystallized in large crystals affecting the octaedral form. It is
unnecessary to detail its chemical properties.
_Of the Tests for Porphyroxine._—This principle is a neutral crystalline
body, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and ether, and also soluble
in weak acids, which part with it unchanged on the addition of an
alkali. When heated with hydrochloric acid, a fine purple or rose-red
solution is produced; whence its name. It is supposed that this property
may be of use in medico-legal researches; and the following mode of
developing it has been proposed by Dr. Merck, its discoverer.[1684]
Decompose the suspected fluid with caustic potash; agitate the mixture
with sulphuric ether; dip a bit of white filtering paper repeatedly in
the etherial solution, drying it after each immersion; then wet the
paper with hydrochloric acid, and expose it to the vapour of boiling
water; upon which the paper will become more or less acid.
_Of the Process for detecting Opium in mixed fluids and solids._
Having stated these particulars of the chemical history of opium and its
chief component ingredients, I shall now describe what has appeared to
me the most delicate and satisfactory method of detecting it in a mixed
state.
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