5-Year-Old Colorado Girl Dies of Cough Medicine Overdose - East Idaho News

5-Year-Old Colorado Girl Dies of Cough Medicine Overdose

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ht kimber michelle brown ll 120416 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1334668216426Courtesy Brown Family(DURANGO, Colo.) — A Colorado girl is dead after taking a lethal combination of two common cold and allergy medicines. Colorado authorities are now investigating her grandmother, who was looking after the 5-year-old.

Kimber Michelle Brown was spending the night with her 59-year-old grandmother, Linda Sheets, at the time of her death on Feb. 12.  Sheets was reportedly treating the girl for flu-like symptoms.

The coroner’s report, which came out this week, ruled the overdose was accidental, caused by dextromethorphan, an ingredient commonly used in cough syrup.  Kimber’s blood levels were two and a half times higher than the recommended dosage.  She also had higher than therapeutic levels of cetirizine, which is the main ingredient in the allergy medicine Zyrtec.

Kimber’s parents, Raelyn Anderson-Brown and Mike Brown, live in Durango, Colo., which is about nine miles from Hermosa, where she died.

Investigators say Sheets, who is Anderson-Brown’s mother, may not have measured the medicine properly, or the child may have also taken some herself.

Now, the Sixth Judicial District Attorney’s Office is investigating whether criminal charges will be filed, according to the Durango Herald, although police have said so far there is no evidence of wrongdoing.

“I consider it a certified combination of drugs, with the dextromethorphan being the highest level,” La Plata County Coroner Dr. Carol Huser told ABC News.

Combining the two depressants produced a greater toxicity than each drug would have caused alone, she said.

Blood levels were taken several hours after the child’s death.  Those were the only drugs in the girl’s system, except for some that the medic administered “to try to save her,” said Huser.

The toxicology report showed that the little girl, who weighed only 46 pounds, had 96 nanograms per millilitre of dextromethorphan in her blood.  The upper limit for this drug in adults is 40 ng/ml.

Kimber also had 490 ng/ml of cetirizine in her system.  A normal dosage would be between 271 and 352 ng/ml.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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