## Correct Answer: C. Bhilawanol Bhilawanol is the active toxic principle of *Semecarpus anacardium* (marking nut or bhilawa), a plant commonly encountered in Indian forensic toxicology cases. The image reference "La d" (likely "Laddu" or a regional variant) points to this plant. Bhilawanol is a cardol derivative—a phenolic lipid that causes severe gastrointestinal irritation, corrosive burns to mucous membranes, and systemic toxicity. When ingested, it produces acute gastroenteritis with hemorrhagic manifestations, followed by cardiovascular collapse. The lethal dose is typically 5–10 grams of the kernel. Bhilawanol's mechanism involves direct mucosal damage and oxidative stress. Unlike ricin (a protein toxin) or abrin (also proteinaceous), bhilawanol is a small lipophilic molecule, making it distinct in both toxicology and forensic identification. Indian forensic pathology texts emphasize bhilawanol as a classic plant poison in the subcontinent, particularly in cases of deliberate poisoning or accidental ingestion in rural settings. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Abrin** — Abrin is the toxic protein from *Abrus precatorius* (rosary pea/gunja), not from *Semecarpus anacardium*. While both are plant toxins encountered in India, abrin is a ribosome-inactivating protein (RIP) that inhibits protein synthesis, producing a different clinical picture (delayed onset, systemic toxicity without early corrosive burns). The image clearly indicates a marking nut, not gunja seeds. **B. Ricin** — Ricin is derived from castor bean (*Ricinus communis*), not from *Semecarpus anacardium*. Ricin is also a protein toxin with a different mechanism (RIP-mediated). Although ricin and abrin share similar proteinaceous nature and systemic effects, neither matches the chemical identity or source plant of bhilawanol, which is a phenolic lipid unique to marking nut. **D. Calotropin** — Calotropin is the cardiac glycoside from *Calotropis gigantea* (madar plant), producing digitalis-like effects (arrhythmias, bradycardia) rather than acute corrosive gastroenteritis. While calotropin is a recognized Indian plant poison, it is structurally and mechanistically distinct from bhilawanol. The clinical presentation and source plant do not match *Semecarpus anacardium*. ## High-Yield Facts - **Bhilawanol** is a cardol-derived phenolic lipid from *Semecarpus anacardium* (marking nut), not a protein toxin like ricin or abrin. - **Lethal dose** of bhilawanol is 5–10 grams of the kernel; death occurs within 24–48 hours due to hemorrhagic gastroenteritis and cardiovascular collapse. - **Clinical presentation**: acute corrosive burns to mouth and GI tract, bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and systemic toxicity—distinguishing it from delayed-onset protein toxins. - **Forensic identification**: bhilawanol is lipophilic and requires chemical extraction; protein toxins (ricin, abrin) are identified by immunoassay or mass spectrometry. - **Indian context**: marking nut poisoning is a recognized cause of deliberate and accidental poisoning in rural India, particularly in southern and western regions. ## Mnemonics **BHILAWA = Bhilawanol (Phenolic lipid)** **B**hilawa → **B**hilawanol (cardol derivative, lipophilic). Remember: *Semecarpus* = marking nut = corrosive burns + hemorrhagic GI bleed. Use when distinguishing plant toxins: if it's marking nut, it's bhilawanol (not ricin/abrin). **RAC = Ricin, Abrin, Calotropin (NOT marking nut)** **R**icin (*Ricinus*), **A**brin (*Abrus*), **C**alotropin (*Calotropis*) — three common Indian plant poisons, but NONE from *Semecarpus*. Use to rule out wrong answers when the plant source is marking nut. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs marking nut with ricin/abrin to exploit students' tendency to group "all plant toxins" together. The discriminator is the chemical nature: bhilawanol is a lipophilic phenolic compound causing acute corrosive damage, while ricin and abrin are proteins causing delayed systemic toxicity. ## Clinical Pearl In rural India, marking nut poisoning often presents as acute hemorrhagic gastroenteritis with rapid cardiovascular collapse—a classic medicolegal autopsy finding. Unlike ricin poisoning (which may show delayed multi-organ failure), bhilawanol victims typically die within 24–48 hours with gross evidence of corrosive burns in the esophagus and stomach, making it a recognizable forensic diagnosis. _Reference: Forensic Medicine & Toxicology (Parikh) Ch. 8 (Plant Poisons); Robbins Ch. 9 (Environmental & Nutritional Pathology)_
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