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    Coroner: Amy Winehouse died from too much alcohol

    Amy Winehouse's father Mitch, center and his partner Jane, right, arrive at St Pancras Coroner's Court for a hearing into the singer's death in London, Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011. A British coroner will hear about the final hours of Amy Winehouse's life at the inquest into the soul diva's death. The singer, who had fought drug and alcohol problems for years, was found dead in bed at her London home on July 23 at age 27. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

    LONDON (AP) — Amy Winehouse drank herself to death. That was the ruling of a coroner's inquest into the death of the Grammy-winning soul singer, who died with empty vodka bottles in her room and lethal amounts of alcohol in her blood — more than five times the British drunk driving limit.

    Coroner Suzanne Greenaway gave a verdict of "death by misadventure," saying Wednesday the singer suffered accidental alcohol poisoning when she resumed drinking after weeks of abstinence.

    "The unintended consequence of such potentially fatal levels (of alcohol) was her sudden and unexpected death," Greenaway said.

    The 27-year-old Winehouse had fought a very public battle with drug and alcohol abuse for years, and there had been much speculation that she died from a drug overdose. But a pathologist said the small amount of a drug prescribed to help her cope with the symptoms of alcohol withdrawal had nothing to do with her death.

    Instead, a resumption of heavy drinking killed the singer, best-known for her tall beehive hairdos and Grammy-winning album "Back to Black." A security guard found Winehouse dead in bed at her London home on July 23.

    "She's made tremendous efforts over the years," said Dr. Christina Romete, who had treated Winehouse. But "she had her own way and was very determined to do everything her way."

    Winehouse gave up illicit drugs in 2008, but had swerved between heavy alcohol use and abstinence for a long time, Romete said. The singer had resumed drinking in the days before her death after staying away from alcohol for most of July, she said.

    Romete said she warned Winehouse of the dangers of alcoholism. "The advice I had given to Amy over a long period of time was verbal and in written form about all the effects alcohol can have on the system, including respiratory depression and death, heart problems, fertility problems and liver problems," she said.

    Winehouse joins a long list of celebrities who died after fighting alcohol problems, including jazz great Billie Holiday, AC/DC lead singer Bon Scott, film legend Richard Burton, writers Dylan Thomas and Jack Kerouac, and country music pioneer Hank Williams.

    Witnesses testifying Wednesday said the singer showed no signs she wanted to kill herself and had spoken of her weekend plans as well as her upcoming birthday just hours before she was found dead.

    "She was looking forward to the future," Romete said, describing Winehouse as "tipsy" but calm when they met the night before her death. That night, her live-in security guard said he heard her laughing, watching television and listening to music at home.

    The guard, Andrew Morris, said he knew she had resumed drinking, but did not notice anything unusual until he found that she had stopped breathing in bed the next afternoon.

    Police Detective Inspector Les Newman said three empty vodka bottles — two large and one small — were found in her bedroom.

    Pathologist Suhail Baithun said blood and urine samples indicated Winehouse had consumed a "very large quantity of alcohol" prior to her death. The level of alcohol in her blood was 416 milligrams per 100 milliliters, he said — a blood alcohol level of 0.4 percent. The British and U.S. legal drunk-driving limit is 0.08 percent.

    The singer's parents attended the hearing, but did not speak to reporters. In a statement, Winehouse family spokesman Chris Goodman said it was a relief to the family "to finally find out what happened to Amy."

    "The court heard that Amy was battling hard to conquer her problems with alcohol and it is a source of great pain to us that she could not win in time," he said.

    Doctors say acute alcohol poisoning is usually the result of binge drinking — the human body can only process about one unit of alcohol, or about half a glass of wine, an hour. Having too much alcohol in the body can cause severe dehydration, hypothermia, seizures, breathing problems and a heart attack, among other difficulties.

    There is no minimum dose for acute alcohol poisoning and the condition varies depending on a person's age, sex, weight, how fast the alcohol is drunk and other factors such as drug use.

    In recent years, the 5-foot-3-inch Winehouse had appeared extremely thin and fragile.

    Dr. Joseph Feldman, chief of emergency services at Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey said Winehouse likely developed a tolerance for large quantities of alcohol after drinking heavily for years. He also said the sedative Winehouse was on, Librium, wouldn't have stopped someone from having seizures if they were in alcohol withdrawal.

    "It's easier to withdraw from heroin than it is from alcohol ... Withdrawal (from alcohol) can cause anxiety, tremors, hallucinations, the sensation of things crawling all over you," he said.

    He said those symptoms sometimes push people back to alcohol.

    "It's possible she could have been saved if she had been found (or treated) earlier," he said. "A lot of treatment is supportive care, like IV fluids and making sure they don't inhale their own vomit."

    Winehouse's breakthrough "Back to Black" album, released in 2006, was recently certified as the best-selling disc in Britain so far during the 21st century. The updated take on old-time soul also earned five Grammy Awards.

    Although the singer was adored by fans worldwide for her unique voice and style, praise for her singing was often eclipsed by lurid headlines about her destructive relationships and erratic behavior. Winehouse herself turned to her tumultuous life and personal demons for music material, resulting in such songs as "Rehab."

    In June, Winehouse abruptly canceled her European comeback tour after she swayed and slurred her way through barely recognizable songs in her first show in the Serbian capital, Belgrade. She was booed and jeered off stage and had to return to Britain to recover.

    Her last public appearance came three days before her death, when she briefly joined her goddaughter, singer Dionne Bromfield, on stage at The Roundhouse in Camden, near her home.

    ___

    Associated Press Medical Writer Maria Cheng contributed to this report.

    Amy Winehouse's mother Janis, left, arrives at St Pancras Coroner's Court for a hearing into the singer's death in London, Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011. A British coroner will hear about the final hours of Amy Winehouse's life at the inquest into the soul diva's death. The singer, who had fought drug and alcohol problems for years, was found dead in bed at her London home on July 23 at age 27. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
     

    2,742 comments

    • Mitchelli  •  7 months ago
      "There were no illegal drugs in her system"... nope, just too much perfectly legal alcohol.
      • Gracie Allen-Slick 7 months ago
        ethanol should be schedule 3
      • gene047 7 months ago
        Saves on embalming expenses.
      • James Washington 7 months ago
        Gracie Allen-Slick. Based on the definition of what a schedule 3 is, I think you have it dead on.
    • Z  •  7 months ago
      Every beer commercial I see is of young people laughing and having fun. You mean alcohol doesn't make you young, attractive and wonderful?
      • Karen S 7 months ago
        people use alcohol to numb the pain of their lives. some have more pain than others, but we all have pain. alot of people just don't know how to handle it and it goes deeper than they can deal with. I wish my son would stop, but I can't change it for him, he is the only one in control of it, and it's always out of control. It's a hard thing for a mother to have to deal with, watching their child putting their life on the line when they drink and not being able to protect them.
      • Rick 7 months ago
        no, but it does wonders for that 'ug' at the bar
      • Revolt77 7 months ago
        No but it can get you laid if you re old or fat or ugly
    • King Priapus  •  7 months ago
      You gotta go some way, but personally I'd prefer death by chocolate.
      • G-Man 7 months ago
        Uh-oh, you're a chocoholic too huh?
      • Engineer Zero 7 months ago
        Whenever I check the scales, I realize that's not so implausible.
    • SysRq  •  7 months ago
      The body can only handle so much alcohol in a given period of time. Alcohol can cause death directly by acting on those brain areas that control consciousness, respiration and heart rate. As a central nervous system depressant, alcohol can "turn off" these vital brain areas, resulting first in coma and then death.
      • Daniel 7 months ago
        Gee, Thanks Mr. Wizzard!
      • Mark T 7 months ago
        Absolutely correct. Alcohol shuts down the autonomous nervous system at that level of ingestion-- which is respiration, heart rate, and more. Alcohol is a central nervous system depressant with anesthetic properties. That is the pharmacological description of Ethyl Alcohol.
      • LoisM 7 months ago
        would not the vomit reflex kick in before the death? Just curious.
    • Paul  •  Pittsburgh, United States  •  7 months ago
      And how many people in all of history have EVER been recorded as dying from a toxic dose of marijuana? (I believe the number is approximately , um, ZERO)
      • Robert 7 months ago
        Well, Paul...in the 70' I tried so very hard to OD on pot. Really, night after night, I was on a mission but to no avail. Others?
      • pops51 7 months ago
        amy who?
      • Sarah 7 months ago
        Actually had a case of a boy using Pot and it burned his lungs..needed a lung transplant and he still died...it kills people..ya dope.
    • sc 1  •  Washington, United States  •  7 months ago
      I am sorry for the family. I think they tried what they could to get her help, but you can not force someone into rehab. But really is anyone surprised? She had a difficult time standing up at her concerts.
    • Blah Blah  •  Phoenix, United States  •  7 months ago
      The disease of denial. No one needs to die to keep me sober. 17 years sober and attending AA meetings regularly. Why do I go to AA meetings still? To help out the millions of other Amy Winehouses of the world. That keeps me sober. Alcohol doesn't care if your a star, it will kick your #$%$
    • Lobo  •  7 months ago
      nothing glamorous about being a drunk.
    • Joan  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  7 months ago
      I heard her sing with Tony Bennett and her voice was out standing. Such a talent lost to alcohol abuse. Perhaps there is a lesson here for someone suffering from the same affliction.
    • Ina Amor-Mejia  •  Makati City, Philippines  •  7 months ago
      We all knew she had problems, needed help, and did things that she shouldn't have, and those things ultimately killed her. But are these rude, insensitive and downright cruel comments really necessary? The woman is dead. How would you people feel if someone you loved died and you read comments like these about them? Geez.
    • Foolonthehill  •  Reno, United States  •  7 months ago
      The coroner missed alcohol poisoning the first time around? Send him back to med school.
    • David  •  Wallingford, United States  •  7 months ago
      The coroner is being kind. The cause of death is clearly acute alcohol poisoning, not 'misadventure'. Thats' what they called it when a classmate of mine drank a fifth of whiskey in an hour then dropped dead when I was in high school.
    • american made  •  7 months ago
      Alcohol, glamorized by society
    • hello  •  7 months ago
      I'm glad they get the record straight, because her dad said she died after suffering a seizure related to alcohol detoxification
    • Sweet Summertine  •  7 months ago
      Janis OD on Heroin and yes many people die of alcohol poisoning each year ...
    • wathena  •  Bakersfield, United States  •  7 months ago
      A loss of a life is a sad thing. My prayers go out to her loved ones.
    • Next World  •  7 months ago
      Alcohol is a hard drug, it is merely legal. If discovered today, it would never be made legal.
    • Mich  •  Detroit, United States  •  7 months ago
      50k alcohol related deaths a year. Add Winehouse to the list.
    • Eric  •  7 months ago
      It's always funny when you hear someone say "I don't use drugs, I just drink" like they're not one in the same. Alcohol is a drug and a very toxic one at that. Anyone with any education on the subject will tell you that. Wikipedia it if you don't know.

      In order to consume it guilt free, society has had to separate it from drugs and put it in it's own category....but it's not.
    • Steve  •  7 months ago
      Depending on where you live, that is either .40 or .50 BAC. Most people cannot walk or start vomitting at twice the legal limit. WOW!!!!