Ingestion of false hellebore plants can cross-react with a digoxin clinical chemistry assay.

2010 
Introduction. We report a case of digoxin-like toxicity because of ingestion of foraged plants. This patient presented with nausea, vomiting, bradycardia, and hypotension after ingesting Veratrum viride (false hellebore). The patient's serum specimen demonstrated a positive digoxin level (0.38 ng/mL) measured by a clinical tubidimetric immunoassay. We hypothesize that steroidal alkaloid compounds contained in V. viride cross-react with the Multigent™ Digoxin immunoassay reagent antibodies. Results. Plant extracts from V. viride demonstrated cross-reactivity to Multigent™ reagent antibodies but did not bind therapeutic DigiFab™ antibodies. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analyses identified several steroidal alkaloid compounds present in the V. viride extracts: jervine, ribigirvine, solanidine, and veratraman. Conclusions. This study indicates that compounds extracted from V. viride can cross-react with a clinical Digoxin immunoassay. Yet these extracts did not bind DigiFab™ antibody fragments used fo...
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