PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Yilmaz, Abdulkerim AU - Gursoy, Sinan AU - Varol, Osman AU - Nur, Naim AU - Ozyilkan, Esin TI - Emergency room cases of mushroom poisoning DP - 2006 Jun 01 TA - Saudi Medical Journal PG - 858--861 VI - 27 IP - 6 4099 - http://smj.org.sa/content/27/6/858.short 4100 - http://smj.org.sa/content/27/6/858.full SO - Saudi Med J2006 Jun 01; 27 AB - OBJECTIVE: To describe the pattern of mushroom poisoning in adults.METHODS: We investigated patients presenting at the Emergency Room, Medical School Hospital, Cumhuriyet University, Turkey between 1999 and 2003 with complaints of mushroom poisoning. They were kept under observation in the emergency unit and Anesthesia Department intensive care unit. We evaluated the demographical features of the patients, laboratory data, vital signs, and applied treatment and results.RESULTS: Seventy-eight patients aged between 19-72 (40.27 ± 16.09) were studied, 52 were females (67%), and 26 were males (33%). It was established that 90% (70) of the patients had picked wild mushrooms, and 67.9% (53) had done so in springtime. Methods of cooking were as follows: 30 patients (38.4%) grilled the mushrooms, 28 patients (35.8%) stir fried, and 20 patients (25.6%) consumed mushrooms uncooked. Onset of symptoms was mostly (43.5%) within the first hour of consumption. The most common (42.3%) symptoms were gastrointestinal complaints. Upon examining laboratory results, 17.9% revealed variations in hematological parameters, impairment in renal functions in 6 patients (7.6%), hematuria in 10 patients (12.8%) and 15.3% had primarily elevated liver enzymes. Seventy-four patients (97%) completely recovered and were discharged. However, 2 patients (2.8%) who consumed raw mushrooms died due to acute hepatic failure. There was a 20-year-old patient at week 31 of her first pregnancy who had consumed uncooked wild mushrooms. She developed gastrointestinal symptoms and mild loss of consciousness within the first half hour. She received quadruple therapy and completely recovered.CONCLUSION: The results of the study indicated that the public, as well as the cultivators, were rather unconcerned and uneducated regarding this issue. Efforts aimed at overcoming this problem will decrease the number of mushroom poisoning cases, will help to save on treatment costs, and more importantly, reduce patient mortality.