Mushroom poisoning
Background
- Mushroom poisoning encompasses a spectrum of clinical syndromes caused by ingestion of toxic mushroom species.
- The key distinction for the emergency physician is between early-onset (<6 hours) and delayed-onset (>6 hours) symptoms, as delayed presentations are far more likely to be life-threatening.[1]
- There are over 5,000 species of mushrooms; approximately 50-100 are toxic to humans[2]
- 95% of mushroom-related deaths worldwide are caused by amatoxin-containing mushrooms (Amanita, Galerina, Lepiota species)[1]
- Most poisonings occur in foragers who misidentify wild mushrooms as edible species
- Immigrants may mistake toxic local species for edible ones from their home country
- Recreational users may confuse toxic species for hallucinogenic Psilocybe mushrooms
- Children and elderly are more susceptible to volume depletion and toxicity
- Amatoxins are heat-stable — cooking does not eliminate the toxin[2]
- Most mushroom ingestions are benign GI irritants; the challenge is identifying the dangerous minority
Critical clinical pearl
- Symptom onset >6 hours after ingestion should be considered potentially lethal until proven otherwise[1]
- Early-onset GI symptoms (<6 hours) are generally self-limited
- Delayed-onset GI symptoms (6-24+ hours) suggest amatoxin, gyromitrin, or orellanine poisoning and carry significant morbidity and mortality
Clinical features
Classified by onset and predominant toxidrome:[3]
Early-onset syndromes (<6 hours)
GI irritant syndrome (most common)
- Caused by many species (e.g. Chlorophyllum molybdites, Entoloma, Boletus)
- Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, diarrhea within 1-3 hours
- Self-limited; resolves with supportive care
- Rarely life-threatening unless severe dehydration
Muscarinic (cholinergic) syndrome
- Caused by Inocybe and Clitocybe species
- Onset 15-30 minutes
- SLUDGE/DUMBELS: salivation, lacrimation, urination, diarrhea, GI cramping, emesis; diaphoresis, urination, miosis, bronchospasm/bronchorrhea, emesis, lacrimation, salivation
- Bradycardia, hypotension
- Treatment: atropine
Isoxazole (anticholinergic/GABAergic) syndrome
- Caused by Amanita muscaria (fly agaric), A. pantherina
- Onset 30 min - 2 hours
- Confusion, agitation, hallucinations, ataxia, myoclonus, seizures
- Mydriasis, tachycardia, dry skin
- Alternating sedation and excitation
- No hepatic or renal injury
- Treatment: supportive; benzodiazepines for agitation/seizures
Psilocybin syndrome
- Caused by Psilocybe, Panaeolus, Gymnopilus species
- Onset 30 min - 1 hour
- Hallucinations (visual), euphoria, anxiety, agitation, tachycardia, mydriasis, hyperthermia
- Self-limited (4-6 hours)
- Treatment: supportive; benzodiazepines for agitation; reassurance
Coprine (disulfiram-like) syndrome
- Caused by Coprinus atramentarius (inky cap)
- Symptoms occur only when mushroom ingestion is combined with alcohol (within 2-72 hours of mushroom ingestion)
- Flushing, tachycardia, headache, nausea, vomiting, hypotension
- Treatment: supportive; IV fluids; avoid alcohol; fomepizole may be considered in severe cases[3]
GI with early renal toxicity
- Caused by Amanita smithiana
- GI symptoms as early as 2-4 hours; renal injury follows
- May present earlier than other serious syndromes — do not assume safety based on early onset alone
Delayed-onset syndromes (>6 hours) — potentially life-threatening
Amatoxin syndrome (most dangerous)
- Caused by Amanita phalloides (death cap), A. virosa (destroying angel), A. verna, A. bisporigera, Galerina spp., Lepiota spp.
- Phase 1 (6-24 hours): severe cholera-like vomiting and watery diarrhea → dehydration, electrolyte derangement
- Phase 2 (24-48 hours): apparent clinical improvement ("false recovery" or "quiescent phase") — transaminases begin rising
- Phase 3 (48-96 hours): fulminant hepatic failure — markedly elevated AST/ALT, coagulopathy, hypoglycemia, encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, DIC, multiorgan failure, death[1]
- Mortality 10-30% overall; higher in children and delayed presentations[2]
- Mechanism: alpha-amanitin inhibits RNA polymerase II → arrests protein synthesis → hepatocellular necrosis
- Amatoxin undergoes enterohepatic recirculation, which is the rationale for multi-dose activated charcoal
Gyromitrin syndrome
- Caused by Gyromitra esculenta (false morel) and related species
- Onset 6-12 hours
- GI symptoms followed by hepatic failure (similar to amatoxin)
- Also causes methemoglobinemia, hemolysis, seizures (via GABA inhibition)
- Mechanism: gyromitrin metabolized to monomethylhydrazine (rocket fuel analog)
- Treatment: pyridoxine (vitamin B6) 25 mg/kg IV for seizures refractory to benzodiazepines; folinic acid; methylene blue for methemoglobinemia[3]
Orellanine syndrome
- Caused by Cortinarius species
- Onset delayed 1-3 days, sometimes up to 2 weeks
- GI symptoms followed by progressive renal failure
- Renal injury may be irreversible, requiring long-term hemodialysis or transplant
- No specific antidote; supportive care
Norleucine (allenic norleucine) syndrome
- Caused by Amanita smithiana, A. proxima
- Onset 4-12 hours (may overlap with early-onset range)
- GI symptoms followed by renal failure (typically reversible)
- Mild hepatotoxicity may accompany
Differential diagnosis
Other causes of acute gastroenteritis
- Acute gastroenteritis (viral, bacterial)
- C. difficile
Other causes of acute liver failure
Other toxic ingestions
- Iron toxicity
- Copper sulfate toxicity
- Caustic ingestion
- Organophosphate toxicity (for muscarinic symptoms)
Mushroom toxicity by Type
| Mushroom | Toxin | Pathologic Effect |
| Amanita | Amatoxin | Hepatotoxicity |
| Coprine | Disulfiram-like | |
| Crotinarius | Orellanine | Delayed renal failure |
| Gyromitra | Gyromitrin | Seizures |
| Ibotenic Acid | Anticholinergic | |
| Muscarine | Cholinergic | |
| Orellanin | Nephrotoxicity | |
| Psilocybin | Hallucinations |
Evaluation
Workup
- Detailed history is the most critical diagnostic tool:
- Timing of symptom onset relative to ingestion (early vs. delayed)
- Type of mushroom (save specimens if available; photograph; consult mycologist)
- Geographic location and season of foraging
- Preparation method (raw, cooked)
- Number of people who shared the meal and their symptoms
- Co-ingestion (especially alcohol for coprine syndrome)
- Attempt mushroom identification:
- Save any remaining mushroom specimens (including spore prints)
- Contact local Poison control center — may have access to mycologists
- Telemedicine/photograph-based identification resources
- Labs (for all symptomatic patients):
- CBC, BMP, hepatic function panel (AST, ALT, total bilirubin, albumin), coagulation studies (PT/INR), lipase
- Blood glucose (hypoglycemia may signal hepatic failure)
- Urinalysis
- Lactate
- Additional labs for suspected amatoxin or serious poisoning:
- Serial LFTs and coagulation studies every 6-12 hours for at least 48-72 hours (transaminases may be initially normal during Phase 1)
- Ammonia (for hepatic encephalopathy)
- Blood type and screen (anticipate possible liver transplant)
- Urine amatoxin assay — available at some specialty/reference labs; may be positive within 24-48 hours of ingestion; not widely available or rapid enough to guide acute management[2]
- Additional labs for specific syndromes:
- Methemoglobin level (gyromitrin poisoning)
- CK (rhabdomyolysis)
- Serial creatinine (orellanine, norleucine syndromes)
- Salicylate, acetaminophen, ethanol levels — if intentional ingestion suspected
Diagnosis
- Primarily clinical, based on timing of symptom onset and symptom constellation
- Key diagnostic rule: GI symptoms >6 hours post-ingestion = assume amatoxin poisoning until proven otherwise
- Rising AST/ALT after initial GI illness is highly concerning for amatoxin or gyromitrin hepatotoxicity
- The "false recovery" period in amatoxin poisoning (GI symptoms improve before liver failure manifests) is a dangerous diagnostic trap — do not discharge patients during this window
Management
All patients
- IV fluid resuscitation; correct electrolyte abnormalities and hypoglycemia
- Continuous cardiac monitoring
- Contact Poison control and attempt mushroom identification
- Anti-emetics (ondansetron) for persistent vomiting
GI decontamination
- Activated charcoal (1 g/kg, max 50 g) if presenting within 1-2 hours of ingestion[3]
- For suspected amatoxin poisoning: give multi-dose activated charcoal (even if presenting late) to interrupt enterohepatic recirculation[2]
- Repeat dosing every 2-4 hours
- Gastric lavage generally not recommended beyond 1 hour post-ingestion
- Whole-bowel irrigation may be considered for amatoxin ingestion
Amatoxin-specific management
No proven antidote exists; all therapies are supportive and based on limited evidence:[2][1]
- N-acetylcysteine (NAC): IV per acetaminophen protocol — provides glutathione, hepatoprotective; widely recommended
- Silibinin (IV): 5 mg/kg IV over 1 hour, then 20 mg/kg/day as continuous infusion — thought to block hepatic amatoxin uptake; used in Europe; not FDA-approved in the US
- Silymarin (oral): milk thistle extract, 1 g PO QID — available over-the-counter in North America as surrogate for IV silibinin
- High-dose penicillin G: 300,000-1,000,000 units/kg/day IV (commonly 4 million units q4h) — may compete with hepatic uptake of amatoxin; evidence is limited
- Multi-dose activated charcoal — interrupts enterohepatic recirculation (see above)
- Aggressive fluid resuscitation — maintain urine output to enhance renal amatoxin clearance
- Liver transplant evaluation: early referral to a transplant center for patients with progressive hepatic failure
- King's College criteria or Clichy criteria may guide transplant listing
- Approximately 50% of patients who develop fulminant hepatic failure will require transplantation[1]
Gyromitrin-specific management
- Pyridoxine (vitamin B6): 25 mg/kg IV — for seizures refractory to benzodiazepines (gyromitrin depletes pyridoxal phosphate/GABA)[3]
- Folinic acid — adjunctive (hydrazines inhibit folic acid conversion)
- Methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg IV — for methemoglobinemia
- Supportive care for hepatic failure similar to amatoxin poisoning
Muscarinic syndrome management
- Atropine 0.5-1 mg IV (adults), 0.01-0.02 mg/kg IV (children); titrate to effect (drying of secretions, resolution of bradycardia)
- May need repeated dosing
Isoxazole/psilocybin syndrome management
- Supportive care
- Benzodiazepines for agitation, anxiety, or seizures
- Reassurance and calm environment (especially psilocybin)
- Avoid restraints if possible (risk of rhabdomyolysis with agitation)
Orellanine syndrome management
- No specific antidote
- Supportive care with nephrology consultation
- Hemodialysis for renal failure; renal transplant if no recovery
Disposition
- Early-onset GI symptoms only (<6 hours), known non-toxic species, mild symptoms:
- Observe 4-6 hours; if tolerating PO and clinically well, may discharge with return precautions
- Symptom onset >6 hours post-ingestion, unknown mushroom species, or suspected amatoxin:
- Admit all patients — ICU if hemodynamically unstable or evidence of organ injury
- Serial labs (LFTs, coagulation, renal function, glucose) every 6-12 hours for minimum 48-72 hours
- Do NOT discharge during the "false recovery" phase (24-48 hours post-ingestion when GI symptoms improve but hepatic injury is evolving)
- Early contact with liver transplant center for amatoxin poisoning[1]
- Patients with isoxazole/psilocybin syndromes:
- Observe until symptoms resolve (typically 4-8 hours); discharge if stable and safe
- Psychiatric evaluation if intentional ingestion
- Orellanine suspected:
- Admit; serial renal function monitoring; nephrology consultation
- All intentional ingestions: psychiatric evaluation mandatory prior to discharge
- All patients: contact Poison control (1-800-222-1222 in the US)
See Also
- Acute liver failure
- Acetaminophen toxicity
- Methemoglobinemia
- Organophosphate toxicity
- Caustic ingestion
- Copper sulfate toxicity
- Rhabdomyolysis
- Acute kidney injury
External Links
- StatPearls — Amatoxin Mushroom Toxicity
- Medscape — Mushroom Toxicity
- American Association of Poison Control Centers (1-800-222-1222)
- Diaz JH — Amatoxin-Containing Mushroom Poisonings: Species, Toxidromes, Treatments, and Outcomes (2018)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Diaz JH. Amatoxin-Containing Mushroom Poisonings: Species, Toxidromes, Treatments, and Outcomes. Wilderness Environ Med. 2018;29(1):111-118. doi:10.1016/j.wem.2017.10.002
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Amatoxin Mushroom Toxicity. StatPearls. 2023. PMID: 28613706
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Mushroom Toxicity. Medscape. 2024.
