|
The below list includes most known mushroom poisons, their effects and a list of poisonous mushrooms.
Poisons included in this list are:
- Cyclopeptide Poisoning
- Monomethylhydrazine Poisoning
- Coprine Poisoning
- Muscarine Poisoning
- Ibotenic Acid - Muscimol Poisoning
- Psilocybin - Psilocin Poisoning (Hallucinogenic)
- Gastrointestinal Irritants
Cyclopeptide Poisoning
The mushrooms in this group include:
Amanita Amanita verna Amanita phalloides (the Death Cap) Amanita virosa Amanita bisporigera Amanita ocreata Galerina Galerina autumnalis Galerina marginata Galerina venenata In addition, the following have possibly toxic concentrations of the primary poisons, but no poisonings have been officially noted:
Amanita Amanita suballiacea Amanita tenuifolia Conocybe Conocybe filaris Amanita ocreata (in fact, the last Portland Mycological meeting had several specimens that had been found in nearby Washington), Amanita phalloides, and the Galerina species are known to grow in the Pacific Northwest. There are four stages to this poisoning:
-the long (6-24, but usually 10-hour) latent period between the ingestion of the mushrooms to the first symptoms -the first symptoms themselves which last for a period of around a day and includes diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea and vomiting -a day long period of apparent remission of the stage two symptoms -during this state liver and kidney failure can occur, and death can follow
The fingerprint which is a almost sure sign of this poisoning is the first stage; the long latent period. Some of the listed confirmed cases of this poisoning include: 1931: in Poznan, Poland, 31 children were reported to have died from a school lunch consisting of Amanita phalloides. 1953-1962: also in Poznan, Poland 126 cases of Amanita phalloides poisoning with 40 fatalities. 1970: three adults and four children shared a stew with mushrooms found in pine woods (identification of the mushrooms is unknown, but they were probably either Amanita verna or A. phalloides). One adult and one child died.
One of the most sensational cases was the local Oregon poisoning of Amanita phalloides that occured October 22, 1988 (see Readers Digest, July 1989, pp. 43-48). A Korean woman had picked mushrooms that looked similar to ones that she used to pick as a child in Korea. Isun Pak had mistaken the deadly Amanita phalloides with what she thought were edible Paddy Straw mushrooms (Volvariella volvacea). Out of five people that had eaten these mushrooms one evening, four received liver transplants and will take medication for the rest of their lives, and one was seriously ill, but recovered fully and didn't have to receive a transplant.
Monomethylhydrazine Poisoning
The mushrooms in this group include:
Gyromitra Gyromitra ambigua Gyromitra brunnea Gyromitra californica Gyromitra caroliniana Gyromitra esculenta Gyromitra fastigiata Gyromitra gigas Gyromitra infula Symptoms for this poisoning typically appear six to eight hours after eating, but it can be as soon as two, and as late and twelve hours afterwards. The symptoms include:
bloated feeling nausea and vomiting watery (or bloody) diarrhea muscle cramps abdominal pain Severe cases can include:
liver damage high fever convulsions coma death (usually two to four days after ingestion) It has been stated that in Europe somewhere between 2-4% of all mushroom induced fatalities are caused by Gyromitra esculenta, while in North America, only about 20 cases of Gyromitra poisonings have been reported since 1900. In a recent 10-year study of mushroom poisonings in Poland (1953-1962), 138 cases of poisonings were attributed to Gyromitra esculenta. 100 of these people were hospitalized, and six of them died. This mushroom is still eaten in the northwest quite frequently, even by expert mycologists. Orson K. Miller, in his Mushrooms of North America states of Gyromitra esculenta "I will eat this only in the PNW (Pacific Northwest, editor) and RM (Rocky Mountains, editor). It is easily confused with an eastern species and individuals react differently to it. Perhaps different populations of it contain different amounts of the MMH toxin."
Coprine Poisoning
The mushrooms in this group include:
Coprinus Coprinus atramentarius In addition some possibly suspect mushrooms are:
Coprinus Coprinus micaceus Coprinus fuscescens Coprinus insignis Coprinus sp. (some African species) Clitocybe Clitocybe clavipes Chemically this compound is very similar to Antabuse (used for the treatment of alcoholics). Symptoms for this poisoning occur usually within 5 to 10 (up to 30) minutes after eating this mushroom, if alcohol has been ingested within the past 24 hours. The symptoms include (these usually last for only a few hours):
hot and sweaty face, becoming flushed flushing spreading to the neck and chest rapid, difficult breathing rapid heart rate violent headache nausea and vomiting Many cases have been noted; this does not appear to be a dangerous reaction and no deaths have been noted.
Muscarine Poisoning
The mushrooms in this group include:
Clitocybe Clitocybe dealbata Clitocybe cerussata Clitocybe rivulosa Clitocybe truncicola Inocybe at least 30 species Amanita muscaria and Amanita pantherina were previously mistakenly thought to have contained primarily muscarine as its poison, but it is now known to contain physiologically insignificant amounts. The symptoms for this poisoning are:
profuse, prolonged sweating tearing salivating severe cases may have the pulse slow, and blood pressure fall to dangerously low levels Many cases of this poisoning that require hospitalization seem to be caused by Inocybe species, while the Clitocybe species seem to primarily just cause sweating. Pure muscarine has been shown to cause the hearts of laboratory animals to stop. However, only one species, Inocybe patouillardii has been reported to have caused death in humans. In a two-year study of mushroom poisonings in Switzerland, at least 19 cases were reported to have been from muscarine poisoning. Two from Clitocybe rivulosa, eleven from Clitocybe nebularis, six from Inocybe patouillardii, including two deaths. In Poland, 15 cases of Inocybe patouillardii were reported, with no deaths.
Ibotenic Acid - Muscimol Poisoning
The primary mushrooms in this group are:
Amanita Amanita cothurnata Amanita gemmata Amanita muscaria Amanita pantherina Amanita smithiana Amanita strobiliformis Tricholoma Tricholoma muscarium (from Japan) The primary symptoms are:
inebriation hallucinations manic behavior delirium deep sleep Most of the poisonings reported in the Pacific Northwest are from the Panther Cap (Amanita panterina). Many reported cases of poisoning in this group of mushrooms is known, but only a very few deaths have been reported. In one case a man had mistakenly eaten two dozen Amanita muscaria (he thought they were Amanita caesarea). He collapsed within a half hour, went into heavy convulsions, lost consciousness, and died a day later. Another death was attributed to Amanita pantherina when they were ingested by a man with a weak heart. In another case a two year old girl, who had shared a meal of Amanita gemmata with her parents became irritable, listless, suffered a convulsive seizure, and then died.
Psilocybin - Psilocin Poisoning (Hallucinogenic)
Mushrooms in this group include:
Psilocybe Psilocybe baeocystis Psilocybe caerulescens Psilocybe caerulipes Psilocybe cyanescens Psilocybe cubensis Psilocybe pelliculosa Psilocybe semilanceata Psilocybe strictipes Psilocybe stuntzii Panaeolus Panaeolus castaneifolius Panaeolus cyanescens Panaeolus fimicola Panaeolus foenisecii Panaeolus sphinctrinus Panaeolus subbalteatus Conocybe Conocybe cyanopus Conocybe smithii Gymnopilus Gymnopilus aeruginosus Gymnopilus validipes Primary symptom:
hallucinations (a well-known and expected effect in most cases) Other possible symptoms:
severe sysphoria vomiting prostration temporary paralysis One of the mushrooms in this group, Psilocybe baeocystis is believed to have been responsible for the death of a child. Two sets of parents and four children had eaten this species and become ill. The parents displayed the standard hallucinogenic symptoms, while the children developed fevers ranging from 102-106 degrees F, with intermittent convulsions. The child with the highest temperature is the one that died. Also, Charles McIlvaine reported that M. C. Cooke (a 19th Century British mycologist) warned of Psilocybe semilanceata (the Liberty Cap): "It is said to have proved fatal to children when eaten raw."
Gastrointestinal Irritants
Some of the mushrooms that fit into this category would be (the mushrooms in the boldface type are ones in this grouping that are known to have caused death):
Agaricus Agaricus albolutescens Agaricus hondensis Agaricus placomyces Agaricus silvicola Agaricus xanthodermus Amanita Amanita brunnescens Amanita chlorinosma Amanita flavoconia Amanita flavorubescens Amanita frostiana Amanita parcivolvata Boletus Boletus luridus Boletus pulcherrimus Boletus satanus Boletus sensibilis Chlorophyllum Chlorophyllum molybdites Entoloma Entoloma lividum Entoloma mammosum Entoloma nidorosum Entoloma pascuum Entoloma rhodopolium Entoloma salmoneum Entoloma strictius Entoloma vernum Gomphus Gomphus bonari Gomphus floccosus Gomphus kauffmanii Hebeloma Hebeloma crustuliniforme Hebeloma fastibile Hebeloma mesophaeum Hebeloma sinapizans Lactarius Lactarius chrysorheus Lactarius glaucescens Lactarius helvus Lactarius representateus Lactarius rufus Lactarius scrobiculatus Lactarius torminosus Lactarius uvidus Lepiota Lepiota clypeolaria Lepiota cristata Lepiota lutea Lepiota naucina Lycoperdon Lycoperdon marginatum Lycoperdon subincarnatum Naematoloma Naematoloma fasciculare Paxillus Paxillus involutus Pholiota Pholiota aurea Pholiota squarrosa Polyprous Polyprous berkeleyi Polyporus cristatus Polyporus giganteus Polyporus schweinitzii Polyporus sulphureus Ramaria Ramaria formosa Ramaria gelatinosa Russula Russula emetica Scleroderma Scleroderma aurantium Scleroderma cepa Tricholoma Tricholoma album Tricholoma muscarium Tricholoma nudum Tricholoma pardinum Tricholoma pessundatum Tricholoma saponaceum Tricholoma sejunctum Tricholoma sulphureum Tricholoma venenata Verpa Verpa bohemica Primary symptoms include:
vomiting diarrhea both This is perhaps the largest group of mushrooms to cause poisonings. These symptoms usually appear within 15 minutes to 4 hours. A few of them have been reported to have caused death. According to a Swiss study conducted over a two-year period, 39 people out of a total of 356 cases of mushroom poisoning were poisoned by Entoloma lividum.
One report in Maryland suggested that a child with a heart defect ate a small piece of Lactarius glaucescens, and that the mushroom contributed to its death.
Another of the mushrooms in this group that has been recorded as having caused deaths is Naematoloma fasciculare. It was stated by W. S. Chilton that records kept for 20 years in Europe, Russia, and Japan attributed six deaths and many more illnesses to this mushroom. It is possible from some of the data that Naematoloma fasciculare belongs to the cyclopeptide poisonings group, but no official report has been done on it yet.
Paxillus involutus is also known to have caused deaths, at least in Europe. In the ten year Poland study, 109 cases of poisonings by Paxillus involutus were reported, with 93 hospitalizations, and one death. Another report listed four poisonings, with three fatalities. The symptoms of this mushroom differ somewhat from others in this group. They include icy extremities, stomach cramps, sweat, weakness, and loss of consciousness, with severe circulatory collapse and fatty degeneration of some of the vital organs occuring.
Some of the mushrooms in this grouping can be eaten over a long period of time with no ill effects at all, yet others can eat a meal of these and experience fleeting gastrointestinal problems. These mushrooms would fall into the categories of individual sensitivities to mushrooms. This would include most of the Morels (Morchella sp.), the Sulphur Shelf mushroom (Polyporus sulphureus), the Blewit (Clitocybe nudum), and the Early Morel (Verpa bohemica). The Mycological Society of San Francisco printed a report in 1975 with the results of a survey on the mushrooms that have caused sickness to the society members. Seven people had report poisonings from the Sulphur Shelf (Polyporus sulphureus) in this survey. The Blewit (Clitocybe nudum), has been reported as having caused poisonings to some people when eaten raw, so this mushroom should always be cooked. This would hold true for the Morels (Morchella sp.) also, and is not a bad idea for any wild mushrooms that will be used for the table. In some people the Early Morel (Verpa bohemica) will cause symptoms when it is eaten over a period of several days in a row, or if large quantities are consumed at one time. These symptoms include stomach upset, and a definite lack of muscular coordination.
The Tiger Tricholoma (Tricholoma pardinum), while not yet known to have caused any fatalities, is violently poisonous. Poisoning from this mushroom can last as long as three to six days before all the symptoms have left. Typically they last for two-six hours though. In a two-year study of mushroom poisonings in Switzerland, 50% of all poisonings were caused by this mushroom (141 cases). This is especially important for us in the Pacific Northwest since it does grow here.
|