Hiponatremia Severa Secundaria A La Exposición A Veneno De Phyllomedusa Bicolor (Rana Kambó).

Autores/as

  • Juan Campodonico Residente de Medicina Interna, Universidad de los Andes
  • Paula Aedo Residente de Medicina Interna, Universidad de los Andes
  • M Ignacia Montané Residente de Medicina Interna, Universidad de los Andes
  • Alejandra Rojas Residente de Medicina Interna, Universidad de los Andes
  • Andree Aveiga Unidad de Tratamiento Intermedio, Clínica Dávila.
  • Lorena Silva Centro de Información Toxicológica de la Universidad Católica (CITUC)
  • Juan Carlos Ríos Centro de Información Toxicológica de la Universidad Católica (CITUC)
  • Iván Solis Departamentos de Medicina Interna y Endocrinología, Clínica Dávila, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Los Andes, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile

Palabras clave:

Amphibian Venoms, Banisteriopsis, Ceremonial Behavior, Hyponatremia

Resumen

Phyllomedusa bicolor or Kambo is a frog that lives in the Amazon rainforest. It can release through its skin a substance used in healing rituals that are common among South-American tribes, as well as in urban people of America and Europe. We report a 41-year-old female patient who, during a healing ritual consumed ayahuasca (a drink obtained from the mixture of Banisteriopsis caapi, Psychotria viridis and Mimosa hostilis) and 12 hours later received the poison of Kambo Frog (Phyllomedusa bicolor) on superficial right shoulder skin burns. The ritual included a minimum of six-liter water intake over a few hours period. She evolved with clouding of sensorium, motor agitation, frequent vomiting, and generalized tonic-clonic seizures. She presented lethargic to the emergency room, with a weak pupillary light reflex, generalized stiffness, moving all four limbs. Laboratory showed severe hyponatremia (120 mEq/L) and a creatine kinase level of 8.479 UI/L, that increased 107.216 IU/L within few days. An admission CT Brain scan was normal. The toxicological screening did not identify the presence of other substances. During hospitalization the patient developed severe psychomotor agitation controlled by a dexmedetomidine infusion, hyponatremia, low plasma osmolality (248 mOsm/kg), and disproportionately high urinary osmolality (448 mOsm/kg), suggestive of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion syndrome (SIADH). With correction of hyponatremia, the patient gradually recovered consciousness. Rhabdomyolysis was assumed to be secondary to seizure and managed by volume and bicarbonate infusions with a positive response.

Biografía del autor/a

Iván Solis, Departamentos de Medicina Interna y Endocrinología, Clínica Dávila, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Los Andes, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile

Jefe Departamento Medicina Interna Clínica Dávila

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Publicado

2019-08-14

Cómo citar

Campodonico, J., Aedo, P., Montané, M. I., Rojas, A., Aveiga, A., Silva, L., Ríos, J. C., & Solis, I. (2019). Hiponatremia Severa Secundaria A La Exposición A Veneno De Phyllomedusa Bicolor (Rana Kambó). Revista Médica De Chile, 147(7). Recuperado a partir de https://revistamedicadechile.cl/index.php/rmedica/article/view/7259

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Sección

Reporte de Caso Clínico

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