Lupin poisoning is a nervous syndrome caused by alkaloids in bitter lupins. Lupin poisoning affects people who eat incorrectly prepared lupin beans. Mediterranean cultures prefer the historic bitter lupin beans with the required toxin-removal by traditional leaching in water preparation methods due to the better flavour that results. Improper preparation of bitter lupins with insufficient soaking allows pharmacologically significant amounts of the
anticholinergic alkaloids to remain in the beans, and poisoning symptoms result. While the alkaloids found in raw and dried beans are bitter and
unpalatable to many, with soaking the level is reduced. There are several references in medical literature to poisoning caused by errors in lupini preparation. Symptoms of lupin bean poisoning (from excess alkaloid in cooked food) include dilated unresponsive
pupils, confusion, slowed thought and
disorientation, flushed face and/or
fever, high heart rate and blood pressure,
tremors, difficulty with or slurred speech, in-coordination, dizziness, burning
dry mouth, stomach pain, and
anxiety or "malaise". Many human symptoms are described in the Australian government's evaluation of lupin food and livestock fodder export safety standards in the medical literature review section Current media describes the symptoms when referring to recent
Australian Medical Journal reports of poisoning from overly bitter lupin flour used in foods reported in the media. According to the
Australia New Zealand Food Authority (2001), "data indicates that the mean alkaloid content of marketable sweet lupin seed is on average 130–150 mg/kg." Regarding the daily tolerable intake of alkaloids, it writes, "The only data available on human chronic toxicity are the reports of traditional use of lupini beans in Europe, which indicate a daily dose of 0.35 mg/kg can be tolerated in adults without adverse affects. […] Also, the information applies only to adults, not children, and it is likely that the adult population has developed a certain amount of tolerance to these alkaloids. […] If a safety factor of 10 is applied to account for the uncertainties in the data and particularly to take into account likely human variation, the provisional tolerable daily intake (PTDI) for humans is 0.035 mg/kg/day or 35 μg/kg/day." A 2017 opinion by the German
Federal Institute for Risk Assessment states that "there are no systematic and validated tests for the quality of household kitchen debittering methods", and as a precaution, it recommends that "consumers avoid the consumption of bitter lupin seeds which were not debittered by the manufacturer, as there is no certainty that the recommended debittering procedures result in a sufficient reduction in the levels of health-damaging alkaloids."
Mycotoxic lupinosis is a disease caused by lupin material that is infected with the fungus
Diaporthe toxica; the fungus produces
mycotoxins called
phomopsins, which cause liver damage. ==Lupin allergy==