Toxic Potential of Traditionally Consumed Mushroom Species-A Controversial Continuum with Many Unanswered Questions

Toxins (Basel). 2020 Oct 2;12(10):639. doi: 10.3390/toxins12100639.

Abstract

Mushroom poisonings remain a significant cause of emergency medicine. While there are well-known species, such as Amanita phalloides, causing life-threatening poisonings, there is also accumulating evidence of poisonings related to species that have been considered edible and are traditionally consumed. In particular, the Tricholoma equestre group was reported to cause myotoxicity. In addition, particular wild mushrooms that are traditionally consumed especially in Asia and Eastern Europe have been subject to suspicion due to possible mutagenicity. Hitherto, the causative agents of these effects often remain to be determined, and toxicity studies have yielded contradictory results. Due to this, there is no consensus about the safety of these species. The issue is further complicated by difficulties in species identification and other possible sources of toxicity, such as microbiological contamination during storage, leading to sometimes opposite conclusions about the edibility of a species. This review focuses on existing data about these types of mushroom poisonings, including the still sparse knowledge about the causative chemical agents. In addition, the aim is to initiate a meta-discussion about the issue and to give some suggestions about how to approach the situation from the viewpoint of the collector, the researcher, and the practicing physician.

Keywords: Tricholoma equestre; edible mushrooms; mushroom poisoning; mutagenicity; rhabdomyolysis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Agaricales / classification
  • Agaricales / metabolism*
  • Animals
  • Food Safety
  • Humans
  • Mushroom Poisoning / etiology*
  • Mushroom Poisoning / metabolism
  • Mushroom Poisoning / mortality
  • Mycotoxins / metabolism
  • Mycotoxins / poisoning*
  • Risk Assessment
  • Species Specificity

Substances

  • Mycotoxins

Supplementary concepts

  • Tricholoma equestre