16 results match your criteria: "Toxicity Mushroom ‚AEi Gyromitra Toxin"
Toxicon
August 2024
Detroit Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, 4201 St. Antoine St., Detroit, MI, USA. Electronic address:
Dtsch Arztebl Int
October 2020
Luxembourg: Prof. Dr. Robert Wennig (formerly Laboratoire National de Santé- Toxicologie, Université du Luxembourg-Campus Limpertsberg); Department of Clinical Toxicology & Poison Control Center Munich, Klinikum rechts der Isar, School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich; GIZ-Nord Poisons Centre,Göttingen University Hospital Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne and Department of Forensic Toxicology, University Hospital Cologne.
Toxins (Basel)
July 2020
Normandie Univ, UNICAEN, Unité de Recherche Aliments Bioprocédés Toxicologie Environnements (ABTE) EA 4651, 14000 Caen, France.
Sud Med Ekspert
May 2016
Saint-Petersburg State Medical University, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, 199034; Institute of Toxicology, Russian Federal Medico-Biological Agency, Bureau of Forensic Medical Expertise, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, 192019.
Clin Toxicol (Phila)
May 2010
Toxicovigilance Center, Michallon Hospital, Grenoble, France.
Toxicon
September 2003
Swedish Poisons Information Centre, Karolinska Sjukhuset, Stockholm S-171 76, Sweden.
Toxicon
December 1993
Medical Intensive Care Unit, Universitätsklinikum Rudolf Virchow, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.
Among poisonous mushrooms, a small number may cause serious intoxication and even fatalities in man. Humans may become symptomatic after a mushroom meal for rather different reasons: (1) ingestion of mushrooms containing toxins, (2) large amounts of mushrooms may be hard to digest, (3) immunological reactions to mushroom-derived antigens, (4) ingestion of mushrooms causing ethanol intolerance, and (5) vegetative symptoms may occur whenever a patient realizes that there might be a possibility of ingestion of a toxic mushroom after a mushroom meal. Based on the classes of toxins and their clinical symptoms, seven different types of mushroom poisoning can be distinguished: (1) phalloides, (2) orellanus, (3) gyromitra, (4) muscarine, (5) pantherina, (6) psilocybin, and (7) gastrointestinal mushroom syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Food Prot
August 1993
Division of Microanalytical Evaluations, Food and Drug Administration, Washington, DC 20204.
J Appl Toxicol
August 1991
Laboratoire de Chimie, Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France.
Mycopathologia
September 1979
J Toxicol Environ Health
October 1979