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Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2005-Apr

Reevaluation of risks with the use of Ficus insipida latex as a traditional anthelmintic remedy in the Amazon.

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Anders Hansson
Julio C Zelada
Hugo P Noriega

Keywords

Abstract

The anthelmintic remedy oje, prepared latex of Ficus insipida, is still used by indigenous and local people in the Amazonian regions. However, overdosage leading to toxic reactions occurs despite the broadcasting of a clinically accepted dosage that is effective and safe. The intoxication of a 10-year-old girl in Pucallpa, who had received oje in a dose close to the recommended one, led us to study retrospectively the records of all hospitalized patients with toxic reactions to oje over a 12-year-period. The use of oje in and around Pucallpa was estimated. Most cases with toxic reactions, out of a total of 39 for the 12-year-period, were probably due to an overdose, defined as more than 1.5 cm(3)/kg; the recommended dose being 1 cm(3)/kg. In only five cases did toxic reactions occur at doses up to 1.5 cm(3)/kg, which were interpreted as idiosyncratic reactions; all of them occurred in children, and in two cases it was a severe reaction. One fatal outcome was noted among the 37 hospitalized patients. Two other fatal outcomes were observed in the 12-year-period but they occurred outside the hospital. The mortality rate is estimated to have been 0.01-0.015% among patients supposedly treated with oje in the area. Severe intoxication led to symptoms of cerebral edema. The main treatment was osmotic diuresis with mannitol which started in 1996. Although hypersensitivity reactions have been observed with other Ficus spp., there was apparently no such reaction in our cases. Recommendations are given so as to avoid toxic reactions from an expected continued use of oje.

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