The autopsy on the body of poisoned former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko has been described as one of the most dangerous ever undertaken, on day two of an inquiry into his death.
Mr Litvinenko died in a London hospital on November 23, 2006, three weeks after drinking tea infused with deadly polonium-210 at a luxury hotel in the city’s Mayfair district.
The London inquiry was told “an inspired hunch” by police led them to bring in atomic scientists, who found Mr Litvinenko tested positive for alpha radiation poisoning two days before he died.
Lead pathologist Nathaniel Cary said without that finding, the cause of death would not have been discovered in a post-mortem.
He added he was unaware of any other case of someone being poisoned with alpha radiation in Britain, and probably the world.
“It has been described as the most dangerous post-mortem examination ever undertaken in the Western world and I think that is probably right,” he told the inquiry.
Those involved had needed to wear two white protective suits with specialised hoods fed with filtered air.
Hours after drinking the tea, Mr Litvinenko suffered from sickness and stomach pains.
He later lost all his hair and died 22 days after the meeting from a cardiac arrest caused by organ malfunction.
Dr Cary said the polonium-210 was the “smoking gun in the case – it shows you what happened”.
One of Britain’s top nuclear scientists, identified only as A1, told the inquiry only a tiny amount, nanograms to micrograms, of polonium would be fatal.
Tests had shown traces of polonium in parts of a ceramic teapot from the Millennium Hotel, including its spout, which were “off the scale”, she said.