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Wild mushrooms keep killing people in California; 3 dead, 35 poisoned

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A third person has died in a rash of poisonings from wild, foraged mushrooms in California, health officials report.

Since November, a total of 35 people across the state have been poisoned by mushrooms, leading to three people receiving liver transplants in addition to the three deaths. Health officials in Sonoma County reported the latest death last week.

Michael Stacey, Sonoma’s interim health officer, attributed the cases and deaths to an extraordinary boom in the prevalence of death cap mushrooms (Amanita phalloides), noting that in an average year, the state sees fewer than five mushroom poisoning cases.

“Early rains and a mild fall have led to profusion of the toxic death cap mushrooms in Northern California,” Stacey said in the announcement. “Eating wild mushrooms gathered without expert identification can be unsafe. Some harmful varieties closely resemble edible mushrooms, even to experienced foragers.”

In an interview with Ars Technica on Monday, Craig Smollin, medical director for the San Francisco division of the California Poison Control System (CPCS) and an emergency medicine professor at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center, said that death cap mushrooms tend to flourish between November and March in the state, though not usually to this extent.

Killer combination

Death cap mushrooms get their name because they contain an amatoxin, which inhibits mRNA transcription, leading to a shutdown of protein synthesis and then cell death. This is toxic to any part of the body, but the poisonings are mostly known for causing liver failure. After ingestion, amatoxins are rapidly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and transported to the liver, where they quickly begin destroying the organ.