Latirose
Revisado por Equipe de paciente e clínicoÚltima atualização por Dr Chloe Borton, MRCGPÚltima atualização 22 Mar 2010
Atende aos diretrizes editoriais
- BaixarBaixar
- Compartilhar
- Language
- Discussão
- Versão em Áudio
Esta página foi arquivada.
Não foi revisado recentemente e não está atualizado. Links externos e referências podem não funcionar mais.
Profissionais de Saúde
Os artigos de Referência Profissional são projetados para uso por profissionais de saúde. Eles são escritos por médicos do Reino Unido e baseados em evidências de pesquisa, diretrizes do Reino Unido e da Europa. Você pode encontrar um dos nossos artigos de saúde mais útil.
Neste artigo:
Lathyrism is a disease caused by eating seeds of species of Lathyrus (the grass pea), mainly L. sativus (the chickling pea or khesari), L. cicera (flat-podded vetch) and L. clymenum (Spanish vetchling). It affects mostly people in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nepal and Algeria but is sometimes found in France, Italy, Spain and Australia. This disease affects horses and cattle as well as in man. Beta-oxalyl-amino-L-alanine acid (BOAA), an excitatory neurotoxin and glutamate agonist, has been identified as the constituent of the chickling pea responsible for the disease. BOAA appears to exert its effects through mitochondrial toxicity.1
The first record of the disease is thought to be an ancient Hindu work called Bhavaprakasa but it was also described by Hippocrates around 400 BC. A survey in India in 1833 reported the disease in poor people during a drought but it was not until 1873 that Cantani in Italy named the disease as lathyrism.
Continue lendo abaixo
Epidemiologia
The chickling pea flourishes in conditions of both flood and drought, when no other food crop survives. It has been the traditional survival food of the poor in some developing countries. An epidemic in the Gondar region of Ethiopia in the 1970s left 1% of the population permanently crippled.2Victims of the forced labour camps in the Second World War displayed signs of chronic lathyrism following a wartime daily dietary intake of 400 g of L. sativus peas cooked in water plus 200 g bread made of barley and straw.3In more recent years, there has been concern that famine conditions in Afghanistan could produce an epidemic of lathyrism.4
It can be boiled as a vegetable, eaten as gruel, or ground into flour to make bread. In the west and north west of Bangladesh, khesari is a staple part of the diet - agricultural labourers eat rutee or chapatee made of khesari. Signs of disease generally appear whenever a diet consisting of one third to one half of L. sativus seed is consumed for 3 to 6 months. Men are affected more often than women, particularly those in the 25-40 year-old age range.5
Fatores de risco6
Cooking with clay implements
Eating green unripe and boiled pea forms
Blood group O7
Protective factors6
Soaking the green peas prior to cooking with fresh water
Eating with antioxidants or mixed with cereals rich in sulphur-based amino acids
Apresentação
Voltar ao conteúdoThe onset of neurolathyrism is usually sudden and coincident with the monsoon season. Early symptoms include:
Walking difficulties
Unbearable cramps
Leg weakness
Spastic paralysis develops which becomes irreversible.
Pyramidal tract involvement causes:
Motor weakness
Increased tone
A lurching scissoring gait caused by involvement of the thigh extensors and adductors and gastrocnemius
Extensor plantar responses
Very brisk knee and ankle tendon reflexes, often clonic
Hoffmann's sign and exaggerated biceps and/or triceps tendon jerks in the most severely affected
There are no objective sensory signs but perverse sensations in the legs are frequently reported at the onset. Walking difficulties often begin suddenly but may also appear subacutely or insidiously. Some people experience partly reversible symptoms suggestive of a diffuse CNS excitation of somatic, motor and autonomic function.8Spasticity can be more marked than the motor weakness.9
Lathyrism is not simply a paralytic syndrome, as angiolathyrism causes sudden death: the toxin changes the elasticity of the aorta causing aneurisma aórtico that may rupture.
Osteolathyrism affects skeletal development: cartilages and bones grow abnormally leaving the body deformed.3Children suffer skeletal deformity and poor cerebral development.
Continue lendo abaixo
Diagnóstico diferencial
Voltar ao conteúdoOther causes of hypertonic paraparesis - por exemplo:
Pott's paralysis
Konzo
HTLV-1 infection
Gestão
Voltar ao conteúdoThe disease is usually nonprogressive but irreversible. Tolperisone, a centrally acting muscle relaxant, has been shown to produce significant reduction in the spasticity in neurolathyrism patients.10Other than that there is remarkably little in the literature about the drug treatment of the condition.
Continue lendo abaixo
Prevenção
Voltar ao conteúdoPublic health education about the dangers of lathyrism is obviously important but the harsh reality is that people may face a choice between lathyrism or starvation. Food preparation measures can help:
Boiling in water or repeated steeping in hot water and discarding the extracts can detoxify the seeds.
Roasting the seeds at 140║C for 15 to 20 minutes results in 80-90% destruction of the neurotoxins.
Soaking the seeds or dhal overnight and decanting the water before cooking eliminates about 90% of the toxin.
The dangers of lathyrism are often known along with knowledge of how to detoxify Lathyrus but drought conditions can lead to fuel and water shortages preventing the necessary steps from being taken.
One goal for prevention is to develop a plant with the resilience of chickling pea to extreme climatic conditions, with its nutritional content and taste but without toxin ('zero BOAA' strains). Genetic modification could offer safer food and the utilisation of marginal farming land. Some varieties of chickling pea that contain a much lower amount of toxin have been developed and may become more widely cultivated.11
Leitura adicional e referências
- Third World Medical Foundation, Lathyrism. US foundation with interest in orphan diseases primarily affecting developing countries.
- Ravindranath V; Neurolathyrism: mitochondrial dysfunction in excitotoxicity mediated by L-beta-oxalyl aminoalanine. Neurochem Int. 2002 May;40(6):505-9.
- Haimanot RT, Kidane Y, Wuhib E, et al; Lathyrism in rural northwestern Ethiopia: a highly prevalent neurotoxic disorder. Int J Epidemiol. 1990 Sep;19(3):664-72.
- Cohn DF, Streifler M; Intoxication by the chickling pea (Lathyrus sativus): nervous system and skeletal findings. Arch Toxicol Suppl. 1983;6:190-3.
- FAO; Special Alert number 315:Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations. Crop and food supply assessment mission to Afghanistan. July 2001.
- Getahun H, Haimanot RT; Psychosocial assessment of lathyrism patients in rural Estie district of South Gondar, northern Ethiopia. Ethiop Med J. 1998 Jan;36(1):9-18.
- Getahun H, Lambein F, Vanhoorne M, et al; Neurolathyrism risk depends on type of grass pea preparation and on mixing with cereals and antioxidants. Trop Med Int Health. 2005 Feb;10(2):169-78.
- Getahun H, Lambein F, Van der Stuyft P; ABO blood groups, grass pea preparation, and neurolathyrism in Ethiopia. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 2002 Nov-Dec;96(6):700-3.
- Ludolph AC, Hugon J, Dwivedi MP, et al; Studies on the aetiology and pathogenesis of motor neuron diseases. 1. Lathyrism: clinical findings in established cases. Brain. 1987 Feb;110 ( Pt 1):149-65.
- Misra UK, Sharma VP, Singh VP; Clinical aspects of neurolathyrism in Unnao, India. Paraplegia. 1993 Apr;31(4):249-54.
- Haque A, Hossain M, Khan JK, et al; New findings and symptomatic treatment for neurolathyrism, a motor neuron disease occurring in north west Bangladesh. Paraplegia. 1994 Mar;32(3):193-5.
- Yan ZY, Spencer PS, Li ZX, et al; Lathyrus sativus (grass pea) and its neurotoxin ODAP. Phytochemistry. 2006 Jan;67(2):107-21. Epub 2005 Dec 5.
Continue lendo abaixo
Histórico do artigo
As informações nesta página são escritas e revisadas por clínicos qualificados.
22 Mar 2010 | Última versão

Pergunte, compartilhe, conecte-se.
Navegue por discussões, faça perguntas e compartilhe experiências em centenas de tópicos de saúde.

Sentindo-se mal?
Avalie seus sintomas online gratuitamente