'Ergotism' is the effect of long-term
ergot poisoning, classically due to the
ingestion of the
alkaloids produced by the ''
Claviceps purpurea''
fungus which infects
rye and other
cereals, and more recently by the action of a number of
ergoline-based drugs. It is also known as 'ergotoxicosis', 'ergot poisoning' and 'St Anthony's fire'. In
Italy and in
Malta,
shingles is also known as St. Anthony's fire.
[1]
Causes
The
toxic ergoline
derivatives are found in ergot-based
drugs (such as
methylergometrine,
ergotamine or, previously,
ergotoxine). The deleterious
side-effects occur either under high
dose or when
moderate doses interact with
potentiators such as
azithromycin.
Classically, eating
grain products contaminated with the
fungus ''Claviceps purpurea'' also caused ergotism.
Finally, the alkaloids can also pass through
lactation from mother to child, causing ergotism in infants.
Symptoms
The
symptoms can be roughly divided into
convulsive symptoms and
gangrenous symptoms.
Convulsive symptoms
Convulsive symptoms include painful seizures and
spasms,
diarrhea,
paresthesias, itching, headaches,
nausea and vomiting. Usually the gastrointestinal effects precede
central nervous system effects. As well as seizures there can be
hallucinations resembling those produced by
LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), and mental effects including
mania or
psychosis. The convulsive symptoms are caused by
clavine alkaloids.
Gangrenous symptoms
The dry
gangrene is a result of
vasoconstriction induced by the ergotamine-ergocristine alkaloids of the fungus. It affects the more poorly vascularized
distal structures, such as the fingers and toes. Symptoms include
desquamation, weak
peripheral pulse, loss of peripheral
sensation,
edema and ultimately the death and loss of affected
tissues.
History
Epidemics of the disease were identified throughout history, though the references in classical writers are inconclusive. Rye, the main
vector for transmitting ergotism, was not grown much around the
Mediterranean. When Fuchs 1834 separated references to ergotism from
erysipelas and other afflictions he found the earliest reference to ergotism in the ''Annales Xantenses'' for the year 857: "a Great plague of swollen blisters consumed the people by a loathsome rot, so that their limbs were loosened and fell off before death."
In the Middle Ages the gangrenous poisoning was known as ''ignis sacer'' ("holy fire") or "
Saint Anthony's fire", named after monks of the
Order of St. Anthony who were particularly successful at treating this ailment. The 12th century chronicler
Geoffroy du Breuil of Vigeois recorded the mysterious outbreaks in the
Limousin region of France, where the gangrenous form of ergotism was associated with the local
Saint Martial as much as Saint Anthony.
The blight, named from the cock's spur it forms on grasses, was identified and named by
Denis Dodart who reported the relation between ergotized rye and bread poisoning in a letter to the
French Royal Academy of Sciences in 1676 (
John Ray mentioning ergot for the first time in English the next year), but "ergotism" in this modern sense was first recorded in 1853.
Research by Linda Caporael (1976) suggests that many of the people whose accusations resulted in the 1692
Salem witch trials in Massachusetts were genuinely suffering hallucinations and other symptoms of convulsive ergotism.
Similar eruptions of ergotism also occurred in Essex and
Fairfield counties in
Connecticut that damp and cool season, though in Connecticut no one went to the gallows. Notable epidemics of ergotism, at first seen as a punishment from God, occurred up into the 19th century. Fewer outbreaks have occurred since then, because in developed countries rye is carefully monitored.
When milled the ergot is reduced to a red powder, obvious in lighter grasses but easy to miss in dark rye flour. In less wealthy countries ergotism still occurs: there was an outbreak in
Ethiopia in mid-2001 from contaminated
barley. Whenever there is a combination of moist weather, cool temperatures, delayed harvest in lowland crops and rye consumption an outbreak is possible.
Russia has been particularly afflicted.
Poisonings due to consumption of seeds treated with
mercury compounds are sometimes misidentified as ergotism, such as the case of mass-poisoning in the French village
Pont-Saint-Esprit in 1951: The incident is described in
John Grant Fuller's book ''
The Day of St Anthony's Fire''.
: The mass poisoning which took place in the French town of Pont-St. Esprit in 1951 has been widely presented in the lay and scientific press as an example of ergotism. While the poisoning was traced to bread, ergotism was not the cause of the syndrome, which was due to a toxic mercury compound used to disinfect grain to be planted as seed. Some sacks of grain treated with the fungicide were inadvertently ground into flour and baked into bread.
Albert Hofmann arrived at this conclusion after visiting Pont-St. Esprit, and analyzing samples of the bread (which contained no ergot alkaloids) and autopsy samples of four of the victims who succumbed (Hofmann 1980; Hofmann 1991). On the other hand, Swedish toxicologist Bo Holmstedt insists the poisoning was in fact due to ergotism (Holmstedt 1978). ...
[2]
See also
★
Ergot
★
Ergolines
★
Alkaloids
References
1. Shingles:An Unwelcome Encore
2. Jonathan Ott, ''Pharmacotheon: Entheogenic Drugs, their Plant Sources and History'' (Kennewick, W.A.: Natural Products Co., 1993), pg. 145. See also Dr. Albert Hofmann, ''LSD: My Problem Child'' (New York, N.Y.: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1980), Chapter 1: "How LSD Originated," pg. 6.
As Dr. Simon Cotton (member of the Chemistry Department of Uppingham School, U.K.) notes, there have been numerous cases of mass-poisoning due to consumption of mercury-treated seeds:
More horrifying than this were epidemics of poisoning, caused by people eating treated seed grains. There was a serious epidemic in Iraq in 1956 and again in 1960, whilst use of seed wheat (which had been treated with a mixture of C2H5HgCl and C6H5HgOCOCH3) for food, caused the poisoning of about 100 people in West Pakistan in 1961. Another outbreak happened in Guatemala in 1965. Most serious was the disaster in Iraq in 1971-2, when according to official figures 459 died. Grain had been treated with methyl mercury compounds as a fungicide and should have been planted. Instead it was sold for milling and made into bread. It had been dyed red as a warning and also had warning labels in English and Spanish that no one could understand.
See Simon Cotton, B.Sc., Ph.D.,
"Dimethylmercury and Mercury Poisoning", ''Molecule of the Month'' (''
MOTM''; published on the School of Chemistry,
University of Bristol, U.K. website), October 2003.
★
George Barger, "Ergot and ergotism," 1931. Abstract.
★ Linnda Caporael, "Ergotism: the Satan loosed in Salem?", ''
Science'' 1976;192:21-6.
Fulltext. PMID 769159.
★ John Grant Fuller, ''The Day of St Anthony's Fire'' (1968). Pont St. Esprit incident of 1951.
External links
★
"Bad Rye and the Salem Witches