Whitney and Daughter |
LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) - Pop star Whitney Houston died of accidental drowning due to
the effects of cocaine use and heart disease, a Los Angeles County
coroner's spokesman said on Thursday.
The 48-year-old
singer, who spent years battling addiction to drugs including cocaine,
was found submerged in the bathtub of her Beverly Hills hotel room on
February 12, the eve of the Grammy Awards.
An autopsy into
Houston's death found that the cause of death was accidental drowning
with atherosclerotic heart disease and cocaine use listed as
contributing factors, Los Angeles County Coroner's spokesman Craig
Harvey said.
Harvey said toxicology tests also turned up marijuana, an
anti-anxiety medication, a muscle relaxant and an anti-histamine in
Houston's system.
Those drugs were not
found to have contributed to her death, and no trauma or foul play were
suspected, the coroner's office said. A final report was expected to be
made public within two weeks.
"We are saddened to
learn of the toxicology results, although we are glad to now have
closure," Patricia Houston, the pop superstar's manager and
sister-in-law said in a statement on Thursday.
Houston soared to the top of the pop charts in the
1980s, best known for a string of hit songs including "I Will Always
Love You." But her career declined as she battled personal issues that
included drug addiction.Patricia Houston told Oprah Winfrey in an interview this month that she had believed the pop star's worst days of drug abuse were behind her.
Members of the family told Winfrey that Houston was found face down and naked in the bathtub, and that attempts by her staff to revive her proved fruitless.
Houston was last in rehab in May 2011. But celebrity media reported that she was seen drinking heavily and behaving erratically in the three or four days before her death.
Sales and downloads
of Houston's best-known songs, including "Saving All My Love for You"
and "My Love is Your Love" soared around the world after her death.
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