| Literature DB >> 22069699 |
Sylvia Worbs1, Kernt Köhler, Diana Pauly, Marc-André Avondet, Martin Schaer, Martin B Dorner, Brigitte G Dorner.
Abstract
Accidental and intended Ricinus communis intoxications in humans and animals have been known for centuries but the causative agent remained elusive until 1888 when Stillmark attributed the toxicity to the lectin ricin. Ricinus communis is grown worldwide on an industrial scale for the production of castor oil. As by-product in castor oil production ricin is mass produced above 1 million tons per year. On the basis of its availability, toxicity, ease of preparation and the current lack of medical countermeasures, ricin has gained attention as potential biological warfare agent. The seeds also contain the less toxic, but highly homologous Ricinus communis agglutinin and the alkaloid ricinine, and especially the latter can be used to track intoxications. After oil extraction and detoxification, the defatted press cake is used as organic fertilizer and as low-value feed. In this context there have been sporadic reports from different countries describing animal intoxications after uptake of obviously insufficiently detoxified fertilizer. Observations in Germany over several years, however, have led us to speculate that the detoxification process is not always performed thoroughly and controlled, calling for international regulations which clearly state a ricin threshold in fertilizer. In this review we summarize knowledge on intended and unintended poisoning with ricin or castor seeds both in humans and animals, with a particular emphasis on intoxications due to improperly detoxified castor bean meal and forensic analysis.Entities:
Keywords: ricin; animal intoxication; fertilizer; human intoxication; poisoning
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22069699 PMCID: PMC3210461 DOI: 10.3390/toxins3101332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Ricinus communis (a) The castor oil plant Ricinus communis with characteristic seed pods; (b) Seeds of Ricinus communis varieties showing the diversity of different R. communis cultivars. From left to right: R. c. zanzibariensis, R. c. zanzibariensis, R. c. green giant, R. c. zanzibariensis, R. c. carmencita, R. c. india, R. c. tanzania.
Summary of human intoxications with ricin.
| Human Cases: Accidental | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uptake/Ingestion | Outcome | Where | Detection and Diagnosis 1 | Ref. 2 | |
| 101 people (different age) | ingestion and injection of varying amounts of | 6 fatal | worldwide | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 26) | in 1900 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | UK | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| juvenile (age 15) | in 1902 ingestion of 10 or 12 castor seeds | fatal | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 4 adults (age unknown) | in 1903 ingestion of 1, 4, 6 and 14 castor seeds, respectively | recovered | Cuba | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 50) | in 1903 ingestion of 2 castor seeds | recovered | UK | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age unknown) | in 1920 ingestion of 5 castor seeds | fatal | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 2 women (age 22 and 41) | ingestion of 2.5-5 castor seeds for treatment of stomach convulsions | fatal | Hungary | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age unknown) | drinking of an extract made of a fistful castor seeds | fatal | Hungary | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 24) | in 1934 ingestion of 15-20 castor seeds | fatal | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 4 adults (age unknown) | ingestion of 1-15 castor seeds | recovered | Austria | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| child (age 7) | in 1941 ingestion of 4 castor seeds | recovered | Italy | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| woman (age 60) | in 1948 ingestion of 10 castor seeds for relaxant | recovered | Brazil | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 2 people (age unknown) | in 1950-1952 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | Italy | suspected | [ |
| 10 children (age 11-13) | in 1958 ingestion of 0.5-6 castor seeds | recovered | Hungary | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 42) | ingestion of 10 seeds | recovered | Poland | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 57 children (age 1-5, >5) | in 1962-1965 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds, on average 4-5 | recovered | India | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 443 children (age <19) | in 1964-1969 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | USA | suspected | [ |
| man (age 57) | in 1970 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds, which were thought to be scarlet runner beans | recovered | Netherlands | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 4 men (age 7-18) | ingestion of 1-2 castor seeds | recovered | India | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| family of 4 people (age 8-44) | in 1974 ingestion of 2-10 castor seeds | recovered | Italy | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| girl (age 17) | in 1965 ingestion of 1 castor seed | recovered | UK | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| child (age unknown) | In the 1970s ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | India | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| boy (age 4) | in 1979 ingestion of 4 castor seeds from an ornamental necklace | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| girl (age 2) | in 1979 ingestion of at least 1 castor seed | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 7 children (age unknown) | in 1968-1970 ingestion of 1-10 castor seeds because of good taste | recovered | Croatia | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 7 adults (age unknown) | in 1968-1970 ingestion of 1-10 castor seeds as laxative | recovered | Croatia | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 2 children (ages 4 and 5) | in 1979 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds which were found in a canister together with walnuts | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 4 adults (age 19-21) | ingestion of 0.5-1 castor seed | recovered | Denmark | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 10 children (age 6-8) | ingestion of 1-7 castor seeds and just contact, respectively | recovered | Spain | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 2 boys (age 17) | ingestion of 8 and 3 castor seeds | recovered | Israel | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 9 children (age 7 to 12) | in 1984 ingestion of 1-2 castor seeds which were taken to school | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| child (age 11) | ingestion of 1 castor seed during lesson in school | recovered | UK | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 21) | ingestion of 12 castor seeds, which were thought to be hazelnuts | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| woman (age 80) | ingestion of unknown amount of shelled castor seeds out of ambiguous reasons | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| woman (age 52) | ingestion of 10-15 castor seeds without knowledge of its toxicity | recovered | Spain | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| child (age 3) | ingestion of two or more castor seeds | recovered | USA | suspected | [ |
| man (age 28) | ingestion of 4 castor seeds as treatment against constipation | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 39) | ingestion of 4 castor seeds, man declared, that he often eats roasted castor seeds | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 28 children (age < 15) | in 1986 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | Sri Lanka | suspected | [ |
| man (age 36) | extract of 1 castor seed was injected, against migraine or out of curiosity | recovered | UK | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 3 patients (age unknown) | in 1966-1994 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | Switzerland | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| young adult (age unknown) | in 1995 ingestion of 10-15 castor seeds out of curiosity | recovered | Australia | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| girl (age 20 months) | ingestion of 2 or more castor seeds | recovered | Canada | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 5 people (age unknown) | ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | Tunisia | not described | [ |
| man (age 70) | ingestion of 10 castor seeds | recovered | Malta | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 120 people (different age) | in 1955 ingestion of varying amounts of castor seeds | 1 fatal | Europe | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| child (age 3) | ingestion of 5-6 castor seeds | recovered | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 69) | swallowing of 30 seeds without chewing; intended use: medical treatment of rheumatism, external application was recommended | recovered | Japan | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 46 children (age unknown) | in 1984-2001 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | recovered | Sri Lanka | suspected | [ |
| man (age 51) | ingestion of one green fruit of castor plant as treatment against cough | recovered | Oman | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| woman (age unknown) | injection of 500 mL castor oil for hip augmentation by unlicensed practitioner | recovered | USA | detection of ricinine in urine | [ |
| woman (age 56) | ingestion of 5 wild castor seeds as treatment against constipation | recovered | Korea | detection of ricin in urine | [ |
| Georgi Markov (age 49) | in 1978 assassination of Markov: poking with an umbrella for injection of a pellet with channels probably containing ricin | fatal | UK | suspected | [ |
| Vladimir Kostov | in 1978 attempted assassination of Kostov: shot in his back with an air pistol for injection of a pellet with channels probably containing ricin | recovered | France | suspected | [ |
| man (age 21) | ingestion of 30 castor seeds in attempting suicide, only some were masticated | recovered | France | detection of ricin in plasma and urine | [ |
| woman (age 38) | in 1985 ingestion of 24 chopped castor seeds in attempting suicide | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| woman (age 20) | ingestion of 12 castor seeds in attempting suicide | recovered | Spain | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| adolescent (age 16) | ingestion of 2 castor seeds in attempting suicide | recovered | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 20) | subcutaneous suicidal injection of castor seed extract | fatal | Poland | suspected | [ |
| man (age 53) | chewing of 13 castor seeds. The mastication product was injected in attempting suicide | recovered | France | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| man (age 61) | intention: suicide, injection of a solution of crushed castor seeds | fatal | USA | detection of ricinine in urine | [ |
| man (age 56), woman (age 59) | injection of extracted ricin from castor seeds into his wife and himself | fatal | Belgium | detection of ricin in urine and syringe | [ |
| man (age 49) | i.v. and s.c. injection of castor seed extract in attempting suicide | fatal | Belgium | detection of ricinine in blood, urine, and syringe | [ |
1 Circumstantial evidence: the causative link to ricin intoxication is based on details of the case report, e.g., known or observed uptake of plant seeds, finding of plant material etc.; suspected: suspicion of ricin intoxication based on symptoms observed. 2 Table is organized by the publication date of literature cited. The table focuses on case reports including clinical signs, symptoms and treatment and makes no claim to be complete.
Summary of animal intoxications with ricin.
| Animal cases: dogs | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uptake/Ingestion | Outcome | Where | Detection and Diagnosis 1 | Ref. 2 | |
| 5 dogs | in 1977-1979 ingestion of organic fertilizer | 3 fatal | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 98 dogs | in 1989-2000 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | 7 fatal | USA | suspected | [ |
| 19 dogs | in 2001 ingestion of fertilizer containing castor seeds | 7 fatal | Germany | circumstantial evidence; detection of ricin in fertilizer | [ |
| dog | in 2002 ingestion of castor seed cakes used as fertilizer | fatal | Brazil | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| dog | in 1999 ingestion of fertilizer based on castor seeds | recovered | Brazil | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| dog | in 1999 ingestion of motor oil based on castor oil | recovered | Brazil | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 35 dogs | in 2001-2003; details of intoxication not described | not described | USA | suspected | [ |
| puppy | ingestion of unknown amount of castor beans | fatal | USA | detection of ricinine in stomach content | [ |
| dog | ingestion of unknown amount of castor beans | recovered | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 2 dogs | ingestion of fertilizer composed of | fatal | Belgium | detection of ricinine in gastric and intestinal content , liver and kidney | [ |
| 15 dogs | in 2007 ingestion of soil conditioner with 10 % oil cake | 13 fatal | Korea | suspected | [ |
| 9 dogs | in 2010, ingestion of fertilizer containing | 2 fatal | Germany | detection of ricinine in urine and ricin in fertilizer and soil | this paper |
| different farm animals, mostly cows | in 1873 ingestion of flaxseed flour contaminated with castor seeds | recovered | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 35 horses | in 1888 ingestion of flaxseed flour contaminated with castor seeds | 1 fatal | Germany | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 70 different animals | in 1950 ingestion of layers’ mash containing castor seed husks in meal | fatal 2 pigs, 1 heifer, 2 cattle | Ireland | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| several 1000 ducks | in 1969-1971 ingestion of unknown amount of castor seeds | fatal for at least 10 ducks | USA | circumstantial evidence | [ |
| 1 horse | in 1999 ingestion and aspiration of ~2 L filtrate made of crushed castor seeds mixed with water | fatal | Brazil | suspected | [ |
| 45 sheep and goats | in 2005 ingestion of garden waste containing castor beans | fatal for 15 animals | Iran | circumstantial evidence | [ |
1 Circumstantial evidence: the causative link to ricin intoxication is based on details of the case report, e.g., known or observed uptake of plant seeds, finding of plant material etc.; suspected: suspicion of ricin intoxication based on symptoms observed. 2 Table is organized by the publication date of literature cited. The table focuses on case reports including clinical signs, symptoms and treatment and makes no claim to be complete.
Figure 3Postmortem analysis of a dog deceased after uptake of R. communis-containing fertilizer. (a) Sample of organic fertilizer which caused nine cases of ricin intoxication in dogs in Germany in March 2010; (b) Soil sample taken from a field which was treated with the fertilizer from (a). Both the fertilizer and the soil sample were shown to contain active ricin; (c) Stomach of the deceased dog showing marked oedema and hyperaemia; (d) Small intestine with acute fibrino-haemorrhagic enteritis; (e) LC-MS/MS spectrum of the dog’s urine containing ricinine. The chemical formula of ricinine is given in the inset (molecular weight 164.2 g/mol); the peak at m/z = 165 represents the protonated precursor ion ([M+H]+).
Figure 2Summary of human and veterinary intoxications with ricin as displayed in detail in Table 1 and Table 2. (a) Human intoxications with ricin as displayed in detail in Table 1. Human cases are presented either as accidental or intended intoxications and are further sub-divided into oral and injectional intoxications. The number of cases reported and the number of fatal cases among them are given within the table (left) and as pie chart (right) with number of oral cases (blue), injectional cases (green) and the number of fatal cases highlighted (hatched); (b) For veterinary intoxications with ricin, details on cases occurring in dogs are summarized as shown in detail in Table 1. The table (left) and the corresponding pie chart (right) show the number of dogs poisoned accidentally in Germany (pale blue) and world-wide (blue) and the number of fatal cases (hatched). Cases mentioned by Milewski et al. were not considered because of lack of information on the outcome of intoxication [188].