Brittany Murphy death caused by pneumonia and drugs
February 5th, 2010 - 3:37 am ICT by IANS
Los Angeles, Feb 5 (DPA) A Los Angeles coroner ruled the death of actress Brittany Murphy to be accidental and caused by drug intoxication, pneumonia and iron deficiency anemia, People.com reported Thursday.
Murphy, 32, who starred in Clueless, was found unresponsive in her home Dec 20 by her husband and her mother Sharon.
Her family has disputed reports that she died from an illegal drug overdose, saying that she was taking prescription medication and painkillers for laryngitis, abdominal pain and flu in the days before her death.
- Coroner: Brittany Murphy's death caused by pneumonia and drug intoxication - Feb 05, 2010
- Brittany Murphy died of pneumonia - Feb 05, 2010
- Coroner: Brittany Murphy and husband Simon Monjack died of the same causes - Jul 23, 2010
- Stop the reckless drug death rumour, says Brittany Murphy's mum - Jul 23, 2010
- Brittany Murphy's Husband, Simon Monjack, Found Dead - May 25, 2010
- Simon Monjack's death similar to wife Brittany Murphy's - Jul 22, 2010
- Coroner Deems That Simon Monjack's Death Resembles That Of Brittany Murphy - Jul 23, 2010
- Coroner States Simon Monjack Died of Pneumonia Just Like Brittany Murphy - Jul 23, 2010
- Like wife, Simon Monjack died of acute pneumonia - Jul 23, 2010
- Late Brittany Murphy's Husband, Simon Monjack, Dies Aged 39 - May 24, 2010
- Brittany Murphy didn't die due to prescription drugs, but due to pneumonia & iron deficiency - Mar 21, 2010
- Simon Monjack Death Similar To Brittany Murphy's - Jul 23, 2010
- Brittany Murphy 'had 109 Vicodin in 11 days', says coroner - Feb 28, 2010
- Brittany Murphy's hubby, mother moving to New York - Mar 04, 2010
- Late Brittany Murphy's husband Simon Monjack found dead - May 24, 2010
Tags: abdominal pain, actress, anemia, brittany murphy, drug intoxication, drug overdose, drugs, flu, home dec, illegal drug, iron deficiency, iron deficiency anemia, los angeles coroner, medication, mother sharon, painkillers, pneumonia, prescription medication