Anna Nicole Smith Died With Toxic Level Of Sleeping Medication In Her System?

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Star Magazine is claiming that Anna Nicole Smith died with a toxic level of the sleeping medication chloral hydrate in her system.

The ENQUIRER and Star claim they have also learned that Anna Nicole had a raging blood infection. The infection was caused by a non-sterile needle and contributed to her death. The ENQUIRER learned that just before she left the Bahamas for Florida on February 5, three days before she died, Anna Nicole received an injection in her left buttock.

The ENQUIRER and Star claim the infection was caused by an non-sterile needle and contributed to her death.

The ENQUIRER and Star claim that contrary to speculation, tests show Anna Nicole did not have methadone or any other painkilling drug in her system at the time of her death.

Monday at 10:30 am the coroner will reveal his findings. The problem I have with the report from the ENQUIRER and Star is when they say Smith did not have methadone in her system. That’s nearly impossible. Methadone is used by heroin addicts to get off heroin, but then the person is addicted to methadone which usually comes as a liquid that the person drinks.

If Smith had an intramuscular injection in her buttock, and if she was already sick when she got the injection, then it was probably 2 grams of Rocephin, which is an antibiotic commonly used to treat bad infections. Smith would have been put on oral antibiotics at the time of her injection to continue to treat an infection for the next 10-14 days. If the injection was an antibiotic it would be very unlikely an abscess would form, as is also claimed by the ENQUIRER and Star, unless the injection was not an antibiotic.

The reports from the ENQUIRER and Star appear to be speculation based on what everyone already knows. Monday at 10:30 am (EST) we’ll find out the real story.


Posted on March 23, 2007 at 11:38 am(PST)

One Response to “Anna Nicole Smith Died With Toxic Level Of Sleeping Medication In Her System?”

  1. Kizzy says:

    That would depend upon whether she was injected with an anti-viral drug, or an anti-bacterial drug. If she was given an anti-viral with a needle that gave her a bacterial infection, then it would not have any effect on her “abscess”, if that part is true.

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