Episode 36

Leafy Greens & Injured Beans: Natures Nephrotoxins – A Poison Lab & NephMadness Collaboration

In this special collaboration with NephMadness, we're diving into the world of nephrotoxins with an expert panel from Virginia Commonwealth University. NephMadness is an educational competition modeled after March Madness, and this year, one of the featured regions focuses on plant-based nephrotoxins. Together, with our expert panel we break down the competing nephrotoxin teams: Tubular Toxins vs. Oxalate Offenders.

Joining us are Dr. Anna Vinnokova (Nephrologist), Dr. Rachel Khan PharmD (Neph pharmacist), Dr. Ethan Downes (Nephrology fellow), and the legendary nephrotoxicologist, Dr. Josh King (Board certified Nephrologist and Toxicologist). We ALMOST named this episode "Getting Downe with the Mad Neph King and the Bean Queens"... but we didn't, your welcome.

After the show, go to the blog and vote for your favorite!

Expect irreverent musings, deep dives into toxic plant exposures, and a mystery case reveal that will leave you questioning your diet.

Topics and Timeline of Episode:

Intro

Listener Guesses With Josh and Ryan– 8:30

Listener Winner25:42

NephMadness and Guest Introductions28:07

Toxin Reveal33:41

Tubular Toxins35:46

The Oxalate Offenders Team: How Dietary Oxalates Harm the Kidneys52:00

  • Historical Context: First recognized through sheep die-offs when herds grazed on Halogeton glomeratus, a high-oxalate plant, leading to fatal poisoning.
  • Oxalate in Plants: Functions to bind excess calcium in the soil.
  • Impact on the Body: Plants high in oxalate but low in calcium can contribute to oxalate accumulation, this leads to binding calcium in the blood, creating calcium oxalate crystals and acute renal calculi. Chronic inflammation from excess oxalate deposition leads to CKD progression.
  • High-Oxalate Foods: Spinach, Swiss chard, rhubarb, cashews. Everything in moderation!

Practical Advice for Clinicians & Patients on Herbal Medicine Use – 1:00:00

  • Resources for identifying nephrotoxic herbal products
  • Talk to your patients non judgmentally, open conversations, discuss efficacy (or lack there of, see resources below) and safety
  • Herbal medicines are not FDA approved and may not contain what they claim to

Herbals may not all be safe: Josh King Discovering Contaminants– 1:01:11

Wrap up– 1:08

Key Takeaways:

  • Aristolochic acid is a direct nephrotoxin, associated with progressive kidney damage and urothelial cancers.
  • Black licorice toxicity results from 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase inhibition, leading to excess cortisol activity, hypertension, potassium wasting, and rhabdomyolysis.
  • Regulatory gaps in herbal supplements can lead to unexpected toxicities, making consumer awareness essential.
  • High dietary oxalate intake increases the risk of kidney stone formation and chronic kidney disease.
  • NephMadness is open to everyone—vote for your favorite nephrotoxin team and join the conversation!

Resources Mentioned:

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Don’t forget to rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your preferred platform. Share this episode with your fellow nephrology and toxicology enthusiasts!

Thanks for tuning in, and remember: If it sounds too good to be true, it might just be nephrotoxic. Stay safe and stay curious!

About the Podcast

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The Poison Lab
Explore the world of poisoning with Clinical Toxicologist Ryan Feldman and Cohost Toxo, dive into the history, science, and life-saving care of poisoning. Survivor stories, expert insights, and deep dives—every poison has a story to tell!

About your host

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Ryan Feldman

Dr. Ryan Feldman PharmD, DABAT is the chief scientist at The Poison Lab. He works as a Clinical Toxicologist, Emergency Medicine Pharmacist, and Clinical Assistant Professor of Pharmacy and Emergency medicine.