A case of paralytic shellfish poisoning caused by consumption of visceral balls from geoduck Panopea japonica in Japan

Toxicon. 2024 May 28:243:107738. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2024.107738. Epub 2024 Apr 27.

Abstract

In the end of March 2018, an unprecedented food poisoning incident due to ingestion of the visceral balls of geoduck Panopea japonica occurred in Japan. The patient, presented with symptoms of numbness on the lips and general weakness, was diagnosed as paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP). The patient immediately treated with the mechanical ventilation recovered and left the hospital after 3 days treatment. Saxitoxins (STXs) in the plasma and urinary samples collected from the patient on the first and second day after hospitalization were analyzed by ultra high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC/MS/MS) and liquid chromatography with post-column fluorescent detection (LC/FLD). The STXs levels of 499.1 and 6.0 μg/L of STX dihydrochloride equivalent (STX·2HCl eq.) were quantitated by LC/FLD in the urinary samples on the first and second day, respectively. In addition, geoducks harvested from the same areas of the PSP causative specimens after the incident were analyzed by LC/FLD, and the results showed the level of STXs in their whole bodies of the geoducks exceeding 0.8 mg STX·2HCl eq./kg which is the maximum levels of STX in CODEX STAN 292-2008. Prominent toxins in STXs that detected in urinary and geoduck samples and identified by UHPLC/MS/MS and LC/FLD were gonyautoxin-1+4 (GTX1+4). These results concluded that the incident was the food poisoning due to STXs accumulated in the geoducks. This is the first PSP case caused by consumption of geoducks in Japan. This is also the first PSP case that causative toxins are detected in urinary samples of patients involved in PSP in Japan.

Keywords: Geoduck; LC/FLD; Paralytic shellfish poisoning; Saxitoxins; UHPLC/MS/MS; Urine.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
  • Humans
  • Japan
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Saxitoxin*
  • Shellfish Poisoning*
  • Tandem Mass Spectrometry*