Ergotism is a disease condition acquired by eating cereal grains infected with ergot fungus. Known since the time of Galen, it was prevalent in medieval Europe, particularly among the poor who, during famine, consumed bread made from spoiled rye. Ergot (secale cornutum, spur of the corn, horned rye, womb grain), the dried sclerotium of Claviceps purpurea, develops on the ovary of common rye, or on corn, where it was previously known as corn smut. The actual cause of ergot in grasses was hotly debated by early naturalists, some of whom thought it occurred in rainy weather and was attributable to fog or impure atmosphere. Others believed it to be the work of worms or butterflies, whereas still others regarded it as the product of improper fecundation or perhaps the cooking of the sexual parts of the plants.
Classification
Ergotism has two forms: (1) convulsive, or spasmodic, also known as creeping, which affects the central nervous system; and (2) gangrenous, which affects the blood vessels and blood supply to the extremities. Common names for the gangrenous form are St. Anthony’s fire (after the patron saint of the disease), hidden fire, saint’s fire, evil fire, devil’s fire, and holy fire. As a result of early imprecision in disease specificity and diagnosis, physicians confused ergotism with the plague and a variety of other diseases including leprosy, anthrax, typhus, smallpox, and scurvy.