“No trauma or foul play is suspected” in Whitney Houston’s death, the coroner said.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Houston used cocaine “in the time period just immediately prior to her collapse in the bathtub,” the coroner says
  • NEW: Narrowed arteries “suggest a cardiac event complicated by the cocaine use” caused her collapse, coroner says
  • Marijuana, Xanax, Flexeril and Benadryl found in her blood did not contribute to her death, the cororner says
  • Houston died her room at the Beverly Hilton Hotel a day before the Grammys

Los Angeles (CNN) — Whitney Houston died from an accidental drowning in a hotel bathtub, but the “effects of atherosclerotic heart disease and cocaine use” were contributing factors in her death, the Los Angeles County Coroner said in an initial autopsy report released Thursday.

Houston, 48, was “found submerged in bathtub filled with water” and “no trauma or foul play is suspected,” the coroner said in a one-page release.

Her cocaine use appeared to have “in the time period just immediately prior to her collapse in the bathtub at the hotel,” Assistant Chief Coroner Craig Harvey told reporters.

The 60% narrowing of her arteries “suggest a cardiac event complicated by the cocaine use” led to Houston slipping underwater, Harvey said.

“Something happened that caused her to go down and we know that when she slipped under the water she was still alive,” he said. “We have evidence of drowning since there was water in the lungs.”

The toxicology tests found other drugs in her body, including marijuana, the anti-anxiety drug Xanax, the muscle relaxant Flexeril and the allergy medicine Benadryl, the report said. But these drugs “did not contribute to the death,” it said.

The report released Thursday did not disclose the levels of each drug, but that information will be included in the final coroner report to be made public within two weeks, the coroner said.

Houston’s family, which had been informed of the findings before Thursday’s release, issued a statement through a family spokeswoman.

“We are saddened to learn of the toxicology results, although we are glad to now have closure,” said Patricia Houston, the singer’s sister-in-law and former manager.

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