Picking, eating wild mushrooms dangerous; 7 downed in Baguio
>> Tuesday, May 28, 2013
By
Carlito C. Dar and AC Torres
BAGUIO CITY – Picking and eating wild
mushrooms could be dangerous to your health.
With the onset of the rainy season, the City
Health Services Office said cases of mushroom poisoning have been recorded in the city.
HSO medical officer Dr. Donnabel Tubera, in
an interview over PIA Hour radio program, disclosed seven cases of mushroom
poisoning were recorded in city hospitals the past two weeks.
Victims included a family of four, a father
and son, and another male.
Two of the children victims were confined
under intensive care unit.
With mushrooms of various varieties
sprouting during the rainy season,
Tubera advised mushroom pickers to be cautious
as there are species of mushrooms that are highly toxic and can cause
renal (kidney) failure.
“If you are not sure, do not eat it. It is
not true that boiling, salting or drying will clean the mushroom of its
toxic substance,” Tubera said.
Mushroom poisoning can be fatal, she added,
citing a patient who died due to renal
failure.
Tubera said symptoms of poisoning include vomiting, stomach aches, and
drowsiness which may manifest within 20 minutes to four hours after eating the
mushrooms.
She advised the public not to eat mushrooms
collected near roads or places like golf courses where the mushroom can be
contaminated with heavy metals, toxic sprays, among others.
She added mushroom pickers and eaters must
know how to identify edible mushrooms.
Tubera said some people were sensitive to
certain types of mushrooms which is why they should always eat a small amount
when it is their first time to try new species.
0 comments:
Post a Comment