Postmortem Redistribution of Drugs Commonly Used in Rapid Sequence Induction for Anesthesia: A Review
Sofia Gkarmiri, Sofia-Chrysovalantou Zagalioti, Efstratios Karagiannidis, Panagiotis Zagaliotis, Panagiotis Stachteas, Aikaterini Apostolopoulou, Sotirios Charalampos Diamantoudis, Marios G. Bantidos, Christos Kofos, Katerina Kotzampassi, Vasileios Grosomanidis, Nikolaos Raikos

TL;DR
This review examines how drugs used in emergency anesthesia can redistribute after death, affecting forensic toxicology results.
Contribution
The paper provides a focused review on postmortem redistribution of RSI drugs, highlighting gaps in current evidence.
Findings
Fentanyl and midazolam show notable postmortem redistribution.
Critical patient conditions and postmortem interval influence drug concentrations.
Limited and heterogeneous data prevent definitive conclusions about PMR.
Abstract
Background: Rapid Sequence Induction (RSI) is a widely used method for emergency airway management in critically ill and clinically unstable patients. Beyond the risks inherent to the procedure itself, RSI is almost exclusively performed in emergency settings where patients present with severe physiological derangement and a high risk of aspiration. In postmortem examinations, forensic toxicology results may be influenced by the patient’s clinical condition, the sampling site, the postmortem interval (PMI), and postmortem drug redistribution (PMR). This review aims to evaluate the existing literature regarding PMR of drugs commonly used during RSI. Methods: PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase and the Cochrane Library were searched for studies on PMR of drugs used in intravenous (IV) RSI (up to November 2025). Human and animal studies, patient populations comparable to critically ill individuals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPoisoning and overdose treatments · Restraint-Related Deaths · Airway Management and Intubation Techniques
