Poisonous Wild Mushrooms in Salinas Leave Patients Facing Potential liver Transplants
USA: County health officials and hospital staff in Salinas, California issued urgent warnings after seven people were treated over a single weekend for poisoning linked to foraged wild mushrooms. Monterey County Health Department and local hospital personnel emphasized that the fungi involved contain amatoxins, a lethal class of compounds that cause severe liver injury, and that standard cleaning or cooking does not remove the danger.
Physicians at Salinas Valley Health, including Dr. Moulton, said the group ranged in illness severity. Several patients have begun to recover, while a subset remains hospitalized and is confronting the possibility of a liver transplant as their condition is closely monitored. Staff noted that supportive medications and medical procedures are being used but that the most critically ill may ultimately require transplantation to survive.
Health officials also stressed the insidious timing of these poisonings: symptoms can be delayed, often appearing six to twelve hours after ingestion and sometimes taking longer to emerge, which can complicate early diagnosis and treatment. The mushrooms implicated are present in parts of California year-round but are most commonly encountered in fall, late winter, and spring, increasing seasonal risk for foragers.
Authorities urged residents to avoid consuming wild mushrooms and to obtain fungi only from commercial sources. Hospitals and the county continue to track the patients and provide updates as treatment decisions progress, with the potential need for liver transplantation at the center of clinical concern for those who have suffered the most severe toxicity.
