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      Voluntary Ingestion of <i>Cortinarius</i> Mushrooms Leading to Chronic Interstitial Nephritis

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          Abstract

          ‘Magic mushrooms’ ingestion among the drug-using population has become a popular cheap way to get hallucinogenic effects which is not free of complications. One of these is acute renal failure related to Cortinarius genus intake. This one greatly resembles ‘magic mushrooms’ and confusion is possible for inexperienced collectors. We report the case of a young male ex-drug addict who developed acute tubulointerstitial nephritis after voluntary ingestion of Cortinarius orellanus . The clinical picture was preceded by a long latency period, had an insidious course without any data of hepatoxicity and evolved to a chronic state. Renal biopsy showed nonspecific histopathological findings. In summary, it is important to bear this possibility in mind when facing an acute tubulointerstitial nephritis of unknown origin in a drug-taking patient.

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          Mushroom poisoning. Case reports and a review of therapy.

          Four incidents of mushroom poisoning, representing four of the seven established groups of toxic mushrooms, are presented. These case reports illustrate the range of gastrointestinal and neurological symptoms caused by mushroom poisoning and reflect a nationwide increase in reports of serious poisonings in recent years. Severity of poisonings often parallels the time span between consumption and onset of symptoms, with serious poisonings having longer incubation periods. New therapies for amatoxin poisoning may reduce mortality caused by these poisonings.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            American Journal of Nephrology
            Am J Nephrol
            S. Karger AG
            0250-8095
            1421-9670
            December 1 1998
            1998
            December 9 1998
            : 18
            : 6
            : 565-569
            Article
            10.1159/000013410
            1de0c468-6074-4e56-8f57-9fe1085b68a0
            © 1998

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