Paraná confirms two more methanol poisoning deaths; state toll reaches three

Three deaths confirmed from methanol poisoning in Paraná; victims aged 41, 43, and 55 years old; additional cases under investigation.
Methanol leaves no trace—no smell, no taste that would alert a drinker.
The poison is undetectable in contaminated alcohol, making it impossible for consumers to identify danger before drinking.

Em outubro de 2025, o Paraná se viu diante de uma crise silenciosa: três pessoas morreram após consumir bebidas alcoólicas adulteradas com metanol, uma substância que não avisa — não tem cheiro, não tem sabor, mas age com rapidez implacável. As vítimas tinham entre 41 e 55 anos e viviam em diferentes cidades do estado, lembrando que o perigo não escolhe lugar nem perfil. Diante da fragilidade da fronteira entre um gole e uma tragédia, as autoridades de saúde convocam a população à vigilância e à busca imediata por cuidado médico ao menor sinal de alarme.

  • Três mortes confirmadas em menos de um mês revelam que bebidas adulteradas com metanol circulam pelo Paraná sem que consumidores possam identificá-las pelo cheiro ou pelo sabor.
  • Com 25 notificações registradas e quatro casos ainda sob investigação — incluindo duas mortes suspeitas em Foz do Iguaçu —, a extensão real do surto permanece incerta e preocupante.
  • O metanol engana: seus primeiros sintomas imitam uma ressaca comum, mas em horas podem evoluir para cegueira, convulsões e coma, tornando cada hora de hesitação potencialmente fatal.
  • Uma nota de alívio em meio à crise: o primeiro caso confirmado no estado, um homem de 60 anos hospitalizado desde 1º de outubro, recebeu alta na quarta-feira, indicando que o tratamento precoce pode salvar vidas.
  • Autoridades ativaram quatro centros regionais de toxicologia — em Curitiba, Londrina, Maringá e Cascavel — e pedem que qualquer suspeita seja reportada imediatamente, pois a janela para intervenção eficaz é estreita.

Na quarta-feira, 22 de outubro, a Secretaria de Saúde do Paraná confirmou mais duas mortes por intoxicação com metanol, elevando para três o total de óbitos no estado. Uma das vítimas era uma mulher de 41 anos, de Curitiba, que estava em estado crítico desde o dia 11 de outubro e tinha condições de saúde preexistentes. A outra era um homem de 43 anos, de Almirante Tamandaré, na região metropolitana da capital, cujo diagnóstico foi confirmado apenas na véspera do anúncio.

O surto se distribui de forma irregular pelo estado. Das 25 notificações registradas, seis casos foram confirmados — quatro em Curitiba, um em Almirante Tamandaré e um em Foz do Iguaçu. As três mortes ocorreram nessas três cidades: um homem de 55 anos em Foz do Iguaçu, a mulher de 41 anos em Curitiba e o homem de 43 anos em Almirante Tamandaré. Quinze suspeitas foram descartadas, e quatro permanecem sob investigação, entre elas duas mortes de homens em Foz do Iguaçu.

Houve também uma notícia encorajadora: o primeiro caso confirmado no estado, um homem de 60 anos internado desde 1º de outubro, recebeu alta na mesma quarta-feira — sinal de que o tratamento oportuno faz diferença.

O metanol é um veneno traiçoeiro: inodoro e insípido, não dá ao consumidor nenhum aviso. Os sintomas surgem entre seis e setenta e duas horas após a ingestão e, no início, se confundem facilmente com uma ressaca — dor de cabeça, náusea, tontura, confusão mental. Mas o quadro pode se agravar com rapidez, evoluindo para dor abdominal intensa, perda de visão, convulsões e coma.

As autoridades reforçam o apelo: qualquer pessoa com esses sintomas deve buscar atendimento médico imediatamente. Os quatro centros regionais de toxicologia do Paraná — em Curitiba, Londrina, Maringá e Cascavel — estão disponíveis para orientar o tratamento e registrar novos casos. O tempo, nessa situação, é o recurso mais escasso.

On Wednesday, October 22nd, Paraná's health department announced that two more people had died from methanol poisoning after drinking contaminated alcohol. One was a woman who had been hospitalized since early October; the other was a man whose diagnosis came just the day before. With these deaths, the state's toll climbed to three.

The first victim was a 41-year-old woman from Curitiba. She had been in critical condition since October 11th, and her medical history included chronic illnesses and other underlying conditions. The second was a 43-year-old man from Almirante Tamandaré, a municipality in the greater Curitiba area. He arrived at a health facility in the capital on Monday, October 20th as a suspected case. Lab results released the following day confirmed methanol poisoning.

The outbreak has been spreading unevenly across the state. So far, health authorities have logged 25 notifications of possible methanol poisoning. Of those, six cases have been confirmed: four in Curitiba, one in Almirante Tamandaré, and one in Foz do Iguaçu. The three deaths occurred in Foz do Iguaçu (a 55-year-old man), Curitiba (the 41-year-old woman), and Almirante Tamandaré (the 43-year-old man). Fifteen suspected cases have been ruled out. Four remain under investigation: two deaths of men aged 47 and 57 in Foz do Iguaçu, a 55-year-old man in Curitiba, and a 54-year-old man in São Miguel do Iguaçu.

One piece of cautiously good news: the first confirmed case in the state, a 60-year-old man hospitalized since October 1st, was discharged on Wednesday. This means Paraná currently has no confirmed cases still hospitalized.

Methanol is a particularly insidious poison because it leaves no trace—no smell, no taste that would alert a drinker. Symptoms typically emerge between six and seventy-two hours after ingestion, and in their early stages they can easily be mistaken for a hangover: headache, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, lack of coordination, dizziness, and mental confusion. But methanol can escalate rapidly. Severe symptoms include intense abdominal pain, vision problems ranging from blurriness to sudden blindness, difficulty breathing, seizures, and coma.

Health authorities are urging anyone experiencing these symptoms to seek immediate medical care. All suspected cases must be reported to one of four regional toxicology information and assistance centers across Paraná, which will guide clinical treatment and notify the health department. The centers operate in Curitiba, Londrina, Maringá, and Cascavel, with phone numbers available to the public. The window between exposure and serious harm is narrow—sometimes just hours—which makes rapid reporting and treatment critical.

The substance cannot be identified by smell or taste, as it does not alter the beverage.
— Paraná State Health Department
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does methanol poison spread through a community this way? It's not like it's in the water supply.

Model

It moves through contaminated alcohol—someone either deliberately adulterates a batch or it gets mixed in by accident during production or distribution. Once it's in circulation, people buy it thinking it's normal liquor. There's no way to know.

Inventor

And the symptoms—why are they so easy to miss at first?

Model

Because they look like a bad hangover. Headache, nausea, confusion. Someone might sleep it off, think they'll feel better in the morning. By the time they realize something is seriously wrong, the poison has already done damage to their organs.

Inventor

The gap between six and seventy-two hours—that's a huge window. What's happening in the body during that time?

Model

Methanol is metabolizing into formaldehyde and formic acid. Those are what actually destroy tissue. The longer it sits, the more damage accumulates. That's why the first person to get help has a better chance than the last.

Inventor

So these four toxicology centers—they're the lifeline here?

Model

Exactly. They know the protocol, they know what to do. If you call them early enough, they can guide treatment that might save your life. If you wait, thinking it's just a hangover, you might not make it.

Inventor

Three people dead, and four more cases still being investigated. Does the state know where the contaminated alcohol came from?

Model

Not yet. That's the other urgent question—finding the source so no one else buys it.

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