1. Lily of the Valley
What type of plant is lily of the valley?
Lily of the valley (Convallaria majalis) is a woodland perennial with a sweet scented, white bell-shaped flower. It blooms from April to June in North America and bears orange-red berries in July [1]. It resembles wild leek or garlic (Allium tricoccum) and misidentification has led to case reports of toxicity [2]. It contains saponins that cause gastrointestinal symptoms and approximately 30 glycosides, notably convallatoxin.
Lily of the valley poisoning is important to recognize because it presents as digitalis toxicity [3]. The entire plant is toxic. The toxins can also leach into water from flowers during storage.
What other plants contain cardiac glycosides? [4]
More than 200 cardiac glycosides are known to occur naturally. Examples of other plants containing cardiac glycosides include:
-
Digitalis purpurea (foxglove)
-
Nerium oleander (common oleander)
-
Thevetia peruviana (yellow oleander)
-
Urginea maritima (squill or sea onion)
-
Cerbera odollam (pong pong)
-
Helleborus niger (henbane)
-
Strophanthus spp. (ouabain, poison rope)
-
Asclepias spp. (balloon cotton, red-headed cotton-bush, and common milkweeds)
-
Calotropis procera (king’s crown)
-
Carissa spectabilis (wintersweet)
-
Carissa acokanthera (bushman’s poison)
What are the symptoms of lily of the valley poisoning? [2, 5]
- Poisoning from plant cardiac glycosides causes reversible inhibition of sodium-potassium ATPase, which increases cardiac inotropy and automaticity. This is indistinguishable from digoxin poisoning,
- Symptoms:
- Nausea and vomiting
- Headaches
- Visual changes (classically seeing haloes around lights)
- Cardiac toxicity (such as bradycardia, heart block, and dysrhythmias)
How do you diagnose lily of the valley poisoning? [4, 6]
- A confirmed history of exposure is helpful.
- Convallatoxin is known to cross-react with the assay used to measure digoxin. Thus, a serum digoxin level may be positive but due to unpredictable cross-reactivity, the level may not be reflective of the severity of exposure.
- An ECG may show signs similar to digoxin exposure
- Classic “scooping” of ST segments
- Heart blocks
- Dysrhythmias
- Hyperkalemia may be seen with severe cardiac glycoside poisoning.
How do you treat lily of the valley toxicity? [2, 7]
- Gastrointestinal decontamination with activated charcoal may be considered in patients who present early after ingestion (up to 2-4 hours).
- Serial ECGs and monitoring of serum potassium should be done in cases of severe poisoning.
- Digoxin specific Fab fragments are recommended if significant toxicity is present.
- Patients with signs and symptoms of cardiac glycoside poisoning should be admitted for close monitoring.
Bedside Pearls
- Toxicity from cardiac glycoside containing plants can be indistinguishable from digoxin toxicity and can result in vomiting, visual changes, hyperkalemia, and cardiac rhythm disturbances.
- A digoxin assay may be positive, but may not correlate with severity of toxicity.
- Digoxin-specific Fab is the antidote.