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      High-dose antioxidant therapy and steroids might improve the outcome of acute renal failure from intoxication by Cortinarius rubellus: report of two cases

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          Abstract

          Only a small number of cases with favourable outcome after acute renal failure due to intoxication by Cortinarius sp. have been reported in the literature, and approximately half of the patients develop chronic renal failure and dialysis-dependency. We report the case of a couple with acute renal failure after accidental intake of Cortinarius rubellus and a favourable outcome after treatment with high-dose antioxidant therapy with N-acetylcysteine and steroids. Dialysis was never necessary in both patients and renal function was almost normal at the end of follow-up. Underdiagnosis of this rare cause of acute renal failure is likely due to the fact that affected patients develop symptoms of intoxication after a delay of 2–30 days. In patients with unclear acute renal failure with or without gastrointestinal symptoms, intoxication from Cortinarius sp. should be considered as a differential diagnosis. Early treatment with high-dose antioxidant therapy and steroids might be effective in reducing the risk of chronic renal failure.

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          Acute renal failure from intoxication by Cortinarius orellanus: recovery using anti-oxidant therapy and steroids.

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            End-stage renal failure from mushroom poisoning with Cortinarius orellanus: report of four cases and review of the literature.

            Mushrooms of the ubiquitous Cortinarius species (Cs) contain nephrotoxins that can cause acute and chronic renal failure by an unknown pathomechanism. Typical is a long symptom-free interval before the onset of clinical disease. A causal form of therapy is not known. Early hemodialysis can improve the prognosis of this potentially life-threatening condition. Diagnosis of Cs poisoning can be made by detecting the responsible toxin--orellanine--in plasma or renal tissue by fluorimetry after thin-layer chromatography or by identifying the spores of left-over mushrooms as Cs. Renal histology shows nonspecific changes such as tubular dilatation and flattening of the epithelium and signs of interstitial edema followed by interstitial fibrosis. We present four cases of Cs poisoning with different outcomes and a review of the literature.
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              First electron spin resonance evidence for the production of semiquinone and oxygen free radicals from orellanine, a mushroom nephrotoxin.

              Orellanine is the tetrahydroxylated and di-N-oxidized bipyridine toxin from several Cortinarius mushrooms. The mechanism responsible for its lethal nephrotoxicity was unknown until now. Our present ESR spectroscopic study of the redox properties of the toxin is an original contribution to the knowledge of its toxicity. It was achieved in particular by comparison of the properties of orellanine to that of other bipyridine compounds. After a one-electron oxidation (e.g., photochemical oxidation upon visible light), a radical form of orellanine is observed at physiological pH under aerobic or anaerobic conditions. This radical, identified as ortho-semiquinone anion radical, can also be generated by oxidation with biological oxidizing agents or enzymatic systems. Production of superoxide and hydroxyl radicals is shown by the spin-trapping method using DMPO as a spin trap. Bioreducing agents like GSH and cysteine involve in vitro the semiquinone radical and orellanine in a redox cycling process resulting in the production of glutathionyl and oxygen free radicals. This process leads in vitro to a large oxygen consumption and to a dramatic depletion of glutathione level. The formation of an apparently stable ortho-semiquinone anion radical and of reactive oxygen radical species is observed for the first time with a mushroom toxin. It is due to the catechol-like functions borne by the di-N-oxidized bipyridine structure of the toxin and may at least partly explain the toxicity of orellanine.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clin Kidney J
                Clin Kidney J
                ckj
                ndtplus
                Clinical Kidney Journal
                Oxford University Press
                2048-8505
                2048-8513
                December 2012
                26 October 2012
                26 October 2012
                : 5
                : 6
                : 576-578
                Affiliations
                Department of Internal Medicine IV (Nephrology and Hypertension), Medical University Innsbruck , Innsbruck, Austria
                Author notes
                Correspondence and offprint requests to: Anton Maurer; E-mail: anton.maurer@ 123456uki.at
                Article
                sfs129
                10.1093/ckj/sfs129
                4400554
                39ee7d2b-0fa1-43b3-b321-4eb42445e171
                © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com

                History
                : 2 August 2012
                : 16 August 2012
                Categories
                Clinical Cases
                Clinical Reports

                Nephrology
                acute renal failure,cortinarius rubellus,intoxication,therapy
                Nephrology
                acute renal failure, cortinarius rubellus, intoxication, therapy

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