Marti Matteo is an Associate Professor of Legal Medicine at the Department of Translational Medicine of the University of Ferrara. He is head of the Forensic Toxicology Laboratory. He has a PhD in cellular and molecular pharmacology and his postgraduate study was in “Multidisciplinary Training on Addiction ” (Italian Department of Anti-Drug Policies, Presidency of the Council of Ministers; PCM). He is also a Professor of “Toxicology” at the University of Ferrara, collaborator of the National Early Warning System (N.E.W.S.) of the Department for Anti-Drug Policies (DPA) of the PCM, collaborator and consultant for non-governmental organizations and law enforcement agencies for the study of the use of psychoactive substances in criminogenic and cultic contexts.
Research Keywords & Expertise
Animal Behavior
Forensic Toxicology
Novel Psychoactive Sub...
drug addiction
sex/gender differences
Synthetic cannabinoids
Cathinones
Synthetic opioids
Toxicology of NPS
Phenethylamines
Pharmaco-toxicology of...
Safety pharmacology st...
Fingerprints
21%
Synthetic cannabinoids
12%
Novel Psychoactive Substances
10%
Cathinones
7%
Synthetic opioids
5%
Phenethylamines
5%
Forensic Toxicology
5%
drug addiction
5%
Toxicology of NPS
5%
Animal Behavior
5%
sex/gender differences
5%
Pharmaco-toxicology of drug abuse
Short Biography
Marti Matteo is an Associate Professor of Legal Medicine at the Department of Translational Medicine of the University of Ferrara. He is head of the Forensic Toxicology Laboratory. He has a PhD in cellular and molecular pharmacology and his postgraduate study was in “Multidisciplinary Training on Addiction ” (Italian Department of Anti-Drug Policies, Presidency of the Council of Ministers; PCM). He is also a Professor of “Toxicology” at the University of Ferrara, collaborator of the National Early Warning System (N.E.W.S.) of the Department for Anti-Drug Policies (DPA) of the PCM, collaborator and consultant for non-governmental organizations and law enforcement agencies for the study of the use of psychoactive substances in criminogenic and cultic contexts.