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Blood Trace Evidence on Washed Textiles - a systematic approach

International Journal of Legal Medicine, 2017

Study Design

Addressed Question

identifying the possibilities of detecting blood and DNA evidence on washed clothing

Activity Context

Washing Machine

Category

PersistenceRecovery

Specifications

Persistence with Water ImmersionVisualisation

Variables of Interest

fabric typewashing set-updrying method

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

2

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

blood

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

2 male donors (age: 24 and 33 years, no relevant illnesses)

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

blood deposit - drying for min. 3 days - washing scenario - drying scenario - visual evaluation - luminol testing - drying - sampling for DNA analysis

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

5x5 cm pieces of different textiles: 100% cotton jersey, 100% cotton jeans denim, 65%cotton/35%polyester blended fabric, 100% micro fleece

Primary Substrate Material

CottonDenimFabricMicro FleecePolyesterVarious

Deposit

3 drops of blood

Delay

air drying for min. 3 days

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

N/A

Secondary Substrate Material

N/A

Secondary Substrate Contact

N/A

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Assumed)

Sampling Time

delayed

Persistence

persistence with water immersion/washing: a) soaking in 5l of 20°C tap water for 12 h with air drying, b) machine washing at 30°C, 60°C or 95°C using different detergents (all-purpose laundry detergent, colorfast laundry detergent, hygiene laundry rinse, bleach, bloodstain remover) followed by air-drying or spin/air-drying, c) handwashing with curd/gall soap with high intensity for 60s followed by wringing out and air-drying

Sampling Method

macroscopic evaluation with systematic assessment of visible blood residues, luminol staining with systematic assessment of chemiluminescence intensity, followed by direct extraction from fabric (not all samples underwent DNA analysis)

Sampling Area

circular-shaped piece of cloth (approx. 1cm in diameter) cut out at position of blood d stain deposit

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

QIAamp DNA minikit

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler Human DNA quantification kit

Input for Profiling

a.p.m.i.

Profiling

PowerPlex ESI kit, ABI 3130 Genetic Analyzer, GeneMapper software v3.2

Reference Samples

obtained from both donors

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

detection of alleles matching known donors

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

0.00-72.9 ng/µl

Profile Quality

mostly complete profiles

Parameter Used for Comparison

stain visibility, luminol staining, DNA yield, DNA analysis results

Summary of Results

macroscopically, bloodstains were visible in 57.2% of washed textiles and no blood was visible on comparison samples (unstained samples cowashed with stained textiles), differences observed between textiles and washing methods; the vast majority of samples showed chemiluminescence: only 4.1% of bloodstained samples and 11.4% of comparison samples showed no chemiluminescence (mostly microfleece textiles), differences observed between textiles and washing methods; DNA analysis (30 samples analyzed): mostly complete DNA profiles (18/30 samples) or at least partial (10/30 samples) profiles obtained; exemplary testing of one comparison sample showing positive luminol detection did not provide usable DNA traces (contaminated washing water considered irrelevant for DNA contamination)

Raised Questions

influence of fabric characteristics on blood adherence; further testing on possibilities of DNA transfer via contaminated washing water

Cautionary Remarks

only a subset of samples used for DNA analysis, thus DNA results can only be considered as proof-of-principle results (not enabling the evaluation of the impact of washing/drying conditions on DNA profiling results)