Jamaican Susumber Berry Poisoning Mimicking Acute Stroke

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Abstract

Background: Stroke mimics are non-vascular conditions that present with acute focal neurological deficits, simulating an acute ischemic stroke. Susumber berry (SB) toxicity is a rare cause of stroke mimic with limited case reports available in the literature. Objectives: We report four new cases of SB toxicity presenting as stroke mimic, and we performed a systematic review. Methods: MEDLINE/EMBASE/WoS were searched for "susumber berries,""susumber,"or "solanum torvum."Results: 531 abstracts were screened after removal of duplicates; 5 articles and 2 conference abstracts were selected describing 13 patients. A total of 17 patients who ingested SB and became ill were identified, including our 4 patients. All but one presented with acute neurologic manifestation; 16 (94%) presented with dysarthria, 16 (94%) with unstable gait, 8 (47%) with nystagmus/gaze deviation, 10 (59%) with blurry vision, and 5 (29%) with autonomic symptoms. Six (35%) required ICU admission, and 3 (18%) were intubated. Fourteen (82%) had a rapid complete recovery, and 3 were hospitalized up to 1 month. Conclusions: SB toxicity can cause neurological symptoms that mimic an acute stroke typically with a posterior circulation symptom complex. Altered SB toxins (from post-harvest stressors or temperature changes) might stimulate muscarinic/nicotinic cholinergic receptors or inhibit acetylcholinesterase, causing gastrointestinal, neurological, and autonomic symptoms. In cases of multiple patients presenting simultaneously to the ED with stroke-like symptoms or when stroke-like symptoms fail to localize, a toxicological etiology (such as SB toxicity) should be considered.

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Tamaiev, J., Trebach, J., Rosso, M., Moriarty, J., Disalvo, P., Biary, R., … Levine, S. R. (2023). Jamaican Susumber Berry Poisoning Mimicking Acute Stroke. Cerebrovascular Diseases, 52(1), 110–116. https://doi.org/10.1159/000525686

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