section name header

10 Second Take

Pennyroyal oil has caused deaths in adults and children; even tea has caused serious poisonings in children.

Basics

[LFODKM ] Letter Key

Latin Namenavigator

(Hedeoma pulegioides L. Pers.); European pennyroyal (Mentha pulegium L.)

Familynavigator

Labiatae

Other Common Namesnavigator

Tick-weed, stinking balm

Descriptionnavigator

Part used: leaf

Known Active Constituentsnavigator

Pulegone and other ketones (L-menthone, D-isomenthone, piperitone) and terpene hydrocarbons. Pulegone levels are highest in the spring (55 mg/g foliage and 3.8 mg/g stem) (1).

Mechanism/Pharmacokineticsnavigator


[Outline]

Evidence

[CAO ] Letter Key

Clinical Trialsnavigator

No clinical trials identified.

Animal/In Vitronavigator

No information identified.

Other Claimed Benefits/Actionsnavigator


[Outline]

Risks

[ADPT ] Letter Key

Adverse Reactionsnavigator

Drug Interactionsnavigator

None reported. However, any substance with hepatotoxic effects would be expected to amplify toxic effects of pennyroyal.

Pregnancy/Lactationnavigator

Pennyroyal is an abortifacient but is too dangerous to use for this purpose.

Animal Toxicitynavigator


[Outline]

Dose

The use of pennyroyal in any form is not recommended. Typical doses are given for information only.

Infusion: made with 1 to 4 g t.i.d.

Liquid extract (1:1, 45% ethanol): 1 to 4 mL t.i.d.

Treatment of Poisoning

Gastric lavage should be done and activated charcoal administered. Pennyroyal oil is rapidly absorbed; ipecac-induced emesis is, thus, less desirable, especially because it increases the risk of aspiration pneumonia.

Ingestions of more than 10 mL should also be treated with NAC (140 mg/kg, then 70 mg/kg every four hours for 24 hours) (see questions and answers). Hepatic function, renal function, and coagulation parameters should be monitored in all patients (3).

Because NAC increases glutathione levels and prevents hepatotoxic effects of acetaminophen (the toxic intermediate of which is detoxified by glutathione), NAC is used empirically to treat pennyroyal poisoning. The half-life of pennyroyal metabolites is only a few hours in animals, and it is possible that NAC is only helpful in the first hours after pennyroyal poisoning (3). NAC does not prevent pulegone-induced hepatocellular damage in animals, but the treatment appears to be helpful in humans and should be used (2).

Common Questions and Answers

Q: Why is the effect of pennyroyal oil so variable?

A: Individual susceptibility clearly varies, and a possible factor is individual differences in levels of cytochrome P (CYP) 450 isoenzymes. Inhibitors of CYP 450 lessen pulegone-induced hepatic damage (3). CYP2E, 1CYP1A2, and CYP2C19 oxidize pulegone to menthofuran (7).

References

  1. Boyd EL. Hedeoma pulegioides and Mentha pulegium. In: De Smet PAGM, Keller K, Hänsel R, Chandler RF (eds.) Adverse effects of herbal drugs. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1992:1. 151–155.
  2. Bakerink JA, Gospe SM, Dimand RJ, Eldridge MW. Multiple organ failure after ingestion of pennyroyal oil from herbal tea in two infants. Pediatrics 1996;98:944–947.
  3. Anderson IB, Mullen WH, Meeker JE et al. Pennyroyal toxicity: measurement of toxic metabolite levels in two cases and review of the literature. Ann Int Med 1996;124:726–734.
  4. Khojasteh-Bakht SC, Nelson SD, Atkins WM. Glutathione S-transferase catalyzes the isomerization of (R)-2-hydroxymenthofuran to mintlactones. Arch Biochem Biophysics 1999;370:59–65.
  5. Carmichael PG. Pennyroyal metabolites in human poisoning [Letter]. Ann Int Med 1997;126:250.
  6. Sudekum M, Poppenga RH, Raju N et al. Pennyroyal oil toxicosis in a dog. J Am Vet Med Assoc 1992;200:817–818.
  7. Khojasteh-Bakht SC, Chen W, Koenigs LL et al. Metabolism of (R)-(+) by human liver cytochrome P-450s: evidence for formation of a furan epoxide. Drug Metab Dispos 1999;27:574–580.