» Articles » PMID: 3765600

Amatoxin Poisoning in Northern California, 1982-1983

Overview
Journal West J Med
Specialty General Medicine
Date 1986 Aug 1
PMID 3765600
Citations 9
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Twenty-two patients who ate mushrooms containing hepatotoxic amatoxins were treated during the fall and winter seasons of 1982 and 1983. All patients were treated with intensive supportive care and repeated oral doses of activated charcoal. In two patients fulminant hepatic failure developed and they died. One patient in whom encephalopathy developed had an orthotopic liver transplant and survived. Liver biopsy specimens obtained from five patients during the acute illness showed centrilobular hemorrhagic necrosis. The hepatic histopathology in a biopsy specimen from a 5-year-old boy eight weeks after mushrooms were eaten showed bands of fibrosis and islands of hepatocytes suggestive of early cirrhosis. Radioimmunoassay for amanitins, done on the serum from all patients, detected the toxins in only three, probably because most of the specimens were obtained 24 hours or more after the ingestion. This series, with a mortality rate of 9%, illustrates the outcome in patients who receive intensive supportive care and provides a background on which success of specific treatments should be judged.

Citing Articles

Extensive proximal tubular necrosis without recovery following the ingestion of Amanita phalloides: a case report.

Angioi A, Floris M, Lepori N, Bianco P, Cabiddu G, Pani A J Nephrol. 2021; 34(6):2137-2140.

PMID: 34143367 PMC: 8610939. DOI: 10.1007/s40620-021-01018-w.


Human Poisoning from Poisonous Higher Fungi: Focus on Analytical Toxicology and Case Reports in Forensic Toxicology.

Flament E, Guitton J, Gaulier J, Gaillard Y Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2020; 13(12).

PMID: 33322477 PMC: 7764321. DOI: 10.3390/ph13120454.


Lepiota subincarnata J.E. Lange induced fulminant hepatic failure presenting with pancreatitis.

Mottram A, Lazio M, Bryant S J Med Toxicol. 2010; 6(2):155-7.

PMID: 20532846 PMC: 3550302. DOI: 10.1007/s13181-010-0062-1.


The optimal management of mushroom poisoning remains undetermined.

GUSSOW L West J Med. 2000; 173(5):317-8.

PMID: 11069865 PMC: 1071150. DOI: 10.1136/ewjm.173.5.317.


Mushroom poisoning due to amatoxin. Northern California, Winter 1996-1997.

Yamada E, Mohle-Boetani J, Olson K, Werner S West J Med. 1998; 169(6):380-4.

PMID: 9866444 PMC: 1305415.


References
1.
Faulstich H, Zobeley S, TRISCHMANN H . A rapid radioimmunoassay, using a nylon support, for amatoxins from Amanita mushrooms. Toxicon. 1982; 20(5):913-24. DOI: 10.1016/0041-0101(82)90079-4. View

2.
Woodle E, Moody R, Cox K, Cannon R, Ward R . Orthotopic liver transplantation in a patient with Amanita poisoning. JAMA. 1985; 253(1):69-70. View

3.
Moroni F, Fantozzi R, Masini E, Mannaioni P . A trend in the therapy of Amanita phalloides poisoning. Arch Toxicol. 1976; 36(2):111-5. DOI: 10.1007/BF00351969. View

4.
Paaso B, Harrison D . A new look at an old problem: mushroom poisoning. Clinical presentations and new therapeutic approaches. Am J Med. 1975; 58(4):505-9. DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(75)90123-0. View

5.
Wauters J, Rossel C, Farquet J . Amanita phalloides poisoning treated by early charcoal haemoperfusion. Br Med J. 1978; 2(6150):1465. PMC: 1608737. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.2.6150.1465. View