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Clin Toxicol (Phila) · Jan 2005
Case ReportsSevere acute poisoning with homemade Aconitum napellus capsules: toxicokinetic and clinical data.
- Fabienne Moritz, Patricia Compagnon, Isabelle Guery Kaliszczak, Yann Kaliszczak, Valérie Caliskan, and Christophe Girault.
- Emergency Department, Rouen University Hospital, Rouen, France. Fabienne.Moritz@chu-rouen.fr
- Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2005 Jan 1;43(7):873-6.
AbstractAconitum napellus is an extremely dangerous plant that contains various toxic diterpenoid alkaloids, mainly aconitine primarily concentrated in the roots. We report a case of acute intoxication of a 21-year-old man admitted to our Emergency Department after the ingestion, in order to sleep, of three homemade Aconitum napellus capsules. Capsules were measured to contain 237 mg of root and 19 microg of aconitine. The patient experienced the first symptoms on wakening 5 hours later with generalized paresthesia, nausea, diarrhea, vertigo, thoracic pain dyspnea, and dyschromatopsia. At admission, 7 hours after intake electrocardiographic analysis showed a sinusal bradycardia with polymorphic and bigeminal ventricular extrasystolia. Cardiovascular and neurological symptoms disappeared, respectively within 11 and 13 hours of ingestion. The patient was discharged from the ICU on day 2. Plasmatic concentrations at H7, H9, H14 H19, and after ingestion were, respectively, of 1.75, 0.75, 0.35, and 0.02 ng/mL. The calculated half-life of aconitine was 3 hours. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case with an aconitine toxicokinetic-effect relationship. The authors stress that clinicians must be aware of possible occurrence of acute poisoning with Aconitum napellus in European countries and in the United States as herbal medicine is becoming increasingly popular.
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