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In 1981 a massive food-borne epidemic, termed the toxic oil syndrome (TOS), occurred in Spain. Eight years later a closely related disease, the eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS), was reported in the USA with many additional cases being reported worldwide. Although EMS was linked to the ingestion
In the past four months a new syndrome has caused more than 100 deaths in Spain. The most striking feature is a toxic-allergic pneumonopathy with respiratory distress and radiological evidence of interstitial (occasionally alveolar) exudation. Other features are fever, headache, nausea, muscular and
Most attempts to reproduce the toxic oil syndrome in animals, either with case-related oils or with refined rapeseed oils, have been unsuccessful. An aniline-denatured rapeseed oil that was subsequently refined according to a protocol yielding relevant markers of "toxic oil" (oil RSO160401) had led
The eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS) was associated with ingestion of L-tryptophan containing products and was accompanied by altered metabolism of L-tryptophan during the active phase. Many patients with EMS exhibited clinical and histopathological features similar to another epidemic, the toxic
Eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome reached epidemic proportions in 1989. Its precise etiology remains uncertain, yet virtually all cases were associated with the ingestion of L-tryptophan containing trace amounts of several chemicals. Clinical and pathologic features of eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome are
During late 1989, the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome (EMS) developed as an epidemic in the United States, with numerous additional cases reported in several other countries worldwide. Eight years earlier, a closely-related disease, the toxic oil syndrome (TOS), occurred in Spain as a massive
The recognition of the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome associated with L-tryptophan in the United States during 1989 as a disorder resembling the previously described 1981 toxic oil syndrome of Spain has established an increased level of consciousness regarding drug and toxin associated diseases. Both
In the spring and summer of 1981, an epidemic of a new illness now referred to as the toxic oil syndrome occurred in central and northwestern Spain, resulting in some 20,000 cases, 12,000 hospital admissions and greater than 300 deaths in the 1st year of the epidemic. The initial onset of illness
This article offered an extensive description of the clinical and pathological features and time-course of the skin manifestations of toxic syndrome caused by denatured rapeseed oil, also known as toxic oil syndrome. This new condition occurred in Spain in 1981 and was due to the ingestion of
Toxic oil syndrome (TOS) was described in Spain in 1981, due to the ingestion of contaminated rapeseed oil denatured with 2% aniline. More than 20,000 persons were affected, causing over 2500 deaths. Immunological findings were: eosinophilia, mRNA for Th2 cytokines (IL-4 and IL-5) in lungs, elevated
Scleroderma-like diseases can be induced by a number of chemical compounds, such as plastics, solvents and drugs. Contaminated rapeseed oil was the cause of the toxic oil syndrome and L-tryptophan induces the so-called eosinophilia-myalgia-syndrome. On the other hand, paraffin and silicon can
The initial symptoms of a new multisystem disease probably caused by ingestion of denatured rapeseed oil were acute pleuropneumopathy, fever, headache, exanthems, myalgia, and eosinophilia. Later features were severe myalgia and thromboembolic accidents. The present phase of the illness is typified
The toxic oil syndrome is a new multisystemic disease, caused by ingestion of adulterated olive oil; this oil had a part of rapeseed oil, which was denatured with aniline for industrial use, and then re-refined. It is estimated that 20,000 people were more or less affected, the mortality being 1.7%.
Toxic oil syndrome burst upon the scene in Spain in May of 1981, draining the resources of a newly evolving political and social medicine system. The vehicle of the causative toxic agent was identified as an illicit oil that had been diverted from industrial use and refined in order to remove the
The toxic oil syndrome is a new multisystemic disease, linked to the consumption of denatured rapeseed oil, which occurred in Spain in 1981. The hematological symptoms, present in about all the patients since the beginning of this disease have been dominated by leukocytosis and eosinophilia. The