Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases
Tiny but very deadly mushrooms blamed for 400 deaths in SW China
By TINI TRAN
The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 13, 2010; 8:25 PM
BEIJING -- Every year during the height of the rainy season, villagers
of all ages in a corner of southwestern China would suddenly die of
cardiac arrest.
No one knew what caused Yunnan Sudden Death Syndrome, blamed for an
estimated 400 deaths in the past three decades.
After a five-year study, an elite investigative unit from China's
Center for Disease Control and Prevention believes it has pinpointed
the cause: an innocuous-looking mushroom known as Little White.
The search for the culprit took investigators to remote villages spread
over the rural highlands of Yunnan province, said Robert Fontaine, an
epidemiologist with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
There was "this very obvious clustering of deaths in villages in very
short periods of time in the summer," said Fontaine, who helped in the
investigation. "It appears that there was something a little different
going on."
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Local health officials had noted the deaths for years. In 2004, they
appealed to Beijing for assistance. The government gave the task to the
China Field Epidemiology Training Program, a unit of medical
investigators at China's CDC assigned some of the country's toughest
health mysteries.
The medical teams encountered obstacles. Many villagers communicated in
their own dialect. Villages were scattered in often remote areas. Rapid
burials made it difficult to conduct autopsies. Torrential rain and
mudslides hampered travel.
But that first year, investigators were able to narrow the list of
possibilities: most victims had drunk surface water, they had emotional
stress and they ate mushrooms.
The investigators zeroed in on mushrooms, because the deaths were
closely aligned with the harvesting season. More than 90 percent of the
deaths occurred in July or August. By the end of 2005, investigators
began issuing warnings to some villages to avoid eating unfamiliar
mushrooms.
That was a difficult order to follow. Yunnan province is legendary for
its wide variety of wild mushrooms, many of which are exported at high
prices. Entire families go out to hunt for them during the summer
months.
By 2008, investigators had discovered a relatively unknown mushroom in
a number of homes where people had died. The mushroom is not usually
sold in the markets, because it's too small.
"We repeatedly found it at all these sites," Fontaine said.
A public information campaign to warn against eating the mushrooms has
dramatically reduced the number of deaths. Only a handful have been
reported in the last couple of years, and none so far this year.
However, the mystery has not yet been definitively solved.
Testing found the mushroom contained some toxins, though not enough to
be deadly. Chinese scientists need to isolate the toxin and test
whether it triggers cardiac arrests.
Researchers have hypothesized that there is a second agent. Many of the
victims showed high levels of barium, a heavy metal in the soil that
seeps into mushrooms.
"There is a lot of work left to do," Fontaine said. "We really need
additional lab investigations."
Problems with poisonous mushrooms are common throughout Asia, said
Diderik De Vleeschauwer, a spokesman for the U.N. Food and Agriculture
Organization regional office in Thailand.
"Normally we expect people to have knowledge of what they can and can't
eat. One would think there is indigenous knowledge available about what
they can forage," he said. "But these are accidents that can happen."