Publication | Open Access
Wild-Mushroom Intoxication as a Cause of Rhabdomyolysis
165
Citations
14
References
2001
Year
Wild-mushroom IntoxicationHealth SciencesMedicineMycotoxin FormationAmanita Phalloides.1Forensic ToxicologyPathologyPoisoningMycotoxicologyMushroom PoisoningToxicologyWild MushroomsPharmacologyMycoproteinFood ToxicologyParasitologyDrug Resistance
The growing popularity of eating wild mushrooms has led to an increase in the incidence of mushroom poisoning. Most fatalities are due to amatoxin-containing species, which cause fulminant hepatocytolysis, and to cortinarius species, which lead to acute renal damage. A 1996 report described a patient with hepatic failure, encephalopathy, and myopathy related to the ingestion of Amanita phalloides.1 Since 1992, 12 cases of delayed rhabdomyolysis have occurred in France after meals that included large quantities of the edible wild mushroom Tricholoma equestre.2 The circumstances of these 12 cases clearly implicate T. equestre as the cause. The mushroom was . . .
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