fbpx
Wikipedia

Mercury poisoning

Mercury poisoning is a type of metal poisoning due to exposure to mercury.[3] Symptoms depend upon the type, dose, method, and duration of exposure.[3][4] They may include muscle weakness, poor coordination, numbness in the hands and feet, skin rashes, anxiety, memory problems, trouble speaking, trouble hearing, or trouble seeing.[1] High-level exposure to methylmercury is known as Minamata disease.[2] Methylmercury exposure in children may result in acrodynia (pink disease) in which the skin becomes pink and peels.[2] Long-term complications may include kidney problems and decreased intelligence.[2] The effects of long-term low-dose exposure to methylmercury are unclear.[6]

Mercury poisoning
Other namesMercury toxicity, mercury overdose, mercury intoxication, hydrargyria, mercurialism
The bulb of a mercury-in-glass thermometer
SpecialtyToxicology
SymptomsMuscle weakness, poor coordination, numbness in the hands and feet[1]
ComplicationsKidney problems, decreased intelligence[2]
CausesExposure to mercury[1]
Risk factorsConsumption of fish, which may contain mercury[3]
Diagnostic methodDifficult[3]
PreventionDecreasing use of mercury, low mercury diet[4]
MedicationAcute poisoning: dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA), dimercaptopropane sulfonate (DMPS)[5]

Forms of mercury exposure include metal, vapor, salt, and organic compound.[3] Most exposure is from eating fish, amalgam-based dental fillings, or exposure at a workplace.[3] In fish, those higher up in the food chain generally have higher levels of mercury, a process known as biomagnification.[3] Less commonly, poisoning may occur as a method of attempted suicide.[3] Human activities that release mercury into the environment include the burning of coal and mining of gold.[4][7] Tests of the blood, urine, and hair for mercury are available but do not relate well to the amount in the body.[3]

Prevention includes eating a diet low in mercury, removing mercury from medical and other devices, proper disposal of mercury, and not mining further mercury.[4][2] In those with acute poisoning from inorganic mercury salts, chelation with either dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) or dimercaptopropane sulfonate (DMPS) appears to improve outcomes if given within a few hours of exposure.[5] Chelation for those with long-term exposure is of unclear benefit.[5] In certain communities that survive on fishing, rates of mercury poisoning among children have been as high as 1.7 per 100.[4]

Signs and symptoms edit

Common symptoms of mercury poisoning are peripheral neuropathy, presenting as paresthesia or itching, burning, pain, or even a sensation that resembles small insects crawling on or under the skin (formication); skin discoloration (pink cheeks, fingertips and toes); swelling; and desquamation (shedding or peeling of skin).[8]

Mercury irreversibly inhibits selenium-dependent enzymes (see below) and may also inactivate S-adenosyl-methionine, which is necessary for catecholamine catabolism by catechol-O-methyl transferase. Due to the body's inability to degrade catecholamines (e.g. adrenaline), a person with mercury poisoning may experience profuse sweating, tachycardia (persistently faster-than-normal heart beat), increased salivation, and hypertension (high blood pressure).[9]

Affected children may show red cheeks, nose and lips, loss of hair, teeth, and nails, transient rashes, hypotonia (muscle weakness), and increased sensitivity to light. Other symptoms may include kidney dysfunction (e.g. Fanconi syndrome) or neuropsychiatric symptoms such as emotional lability, memory impairment, or insomnia.[10]

Thus, the clinical presentation may resemble pheochromocytoma or Kawasaki disease. Desquamation (skin peeling) can occur with severe mercury poisoning acquired by handling elemental mercury.[11]

Causes edit

Consumption of fish containing mercury is by far the most significant source of ingestion-related mercury exposure in humans, although plants and livestock also contain mercury due to bioconcentration of organic mercury from seawater, freshwater, marine and lacustrine sediments, soils, and atmosphere, and due to biomagnification by ingesting other mercury-containing organisms.[12] Exposure to mercury can occur from breathing contaminated air,[13] from eating foods that have acquired mercury residues during processing,[14][15] from exposure to mercury vapor in mercury amalgam dental restorations,[16] and from improper use or disposal of mercury and mercury-containing objects, for example, after spills of elemental mercury or improper disposal of fluorescent lamps.[17]

All of these, except elemental liquid mercury, produce toxicity or death with less than a gram. Mercury's zero oxidation state (Hg0) exists as vapor or as liquid metal, its mercurous state (Hg+) exists as inorganic salts, and its mercuric state (Hg2+) may form either inorganic salts or organomercury compounds.[citation needed]

Consumption of whale and dolphin meat, as is the practice in Japan, is a source of high levels of mercury poisoning. Tetsuya Endo, a professor at the Health Sciences University of Hokkaido, has tested whale meat purchased in the whaling town of Taiji and found mercury levels more than 20 times the acceptable Japanese standard.[18]

Human-generated sources, such as coal-burning power plants[19] emit about half of atmospheric mercury, with natural sources such as volcanoes responsible for the remainder. A 2021 publication investigating the mercury distribution in European soils found that high mercury concentrations are found close to abandoned mines (such as Almadén (Castilla-La Mancha, Spain), Mt. Amiata (Italy), Idrija (Slovenia) and Rudnany (Slovakia)) and coal-fired power plants.[20] An estimated two-thirds of human-generated mercury comes from stationary combustion, mostly of coal. Other important human-generated sources include gold production, nonferrous metal production, cement production, waste disposal, human crematoria, caustic soda production, pig iron and steel production, mercury production (mostly for batteries), and biomass burning.[21]

Small independent gold-mining operation workers are at higher risk of mercury poisoning because of crude processing methods. Such is the danger for the galamsey in Ghana and similar workers known as orpailleurs in neighboring francophone countries. While no official government estimates of the labor force have been made, observers believe 20,000–50,000 work as galamseys in Ghana, a figure including many women, who work as porters. Similar problems have been reported amongst the gold miners of Indonesia.[22]

Some mercury compounds, especially organomercury compounds, can also be readily absorbed through direct skin contact. Mercury and its compounds are commonly used in chemical laboratories, hospitals, dental clinics, and facilities involved in the production of items such as fluorescent light bulbs, batteries, and explosives.[23]

Many traditional medicines, including ones used in Ayurvedic medicine and Traditional Chinese medicine, contain mercury and other heavy metals.[24][25]

Sources edit

Organic compounds of mercury tend to be much more toxic than either the elemental form or the salts. These compounds have been implicated in causing brain and liver damage. The most dangerous mercury compound, dimethylmercury, is so toxic that even a few microliters spilled on the skin, or even on a latex glove, can cause death.[26][27]

Methylmercury and related organomercury compounds edit

Methylmercury is the major source of organic mercury for all individuals.[28] Due to bioaccumulation it works its way up through the food web and thus biomagnifies, resulting in high concentrations among populations of some species. Top predatory fish, such as tuna or swordfish, are usually of greater concern than smaller species. The US FDA and the EPA advise women of child-bearing age, nursing mothers, and young children to completely avoid swordfish, shark, king mackerel and tilefish from the Gulf of Mexico, and to limit consumption of albacore ("white") tuna to no more than 170 g (6 oz) per week, and of all other fish and shellfish to no more than 340 g (12 oz) per week.[29] A 2006 review of the risks and benefits of fish consumption found, for adults, the benefits of one to two servings of fish per week outweigh the risks, even (except for a few fish species) for women of childbearing age, and that avoidance of fish consumption could result in significant excess coronary heart disease deaths and suboptimal neural development in children.[30]

Because the process of mercury-dependent sequestration of selenium is slow, the period between exposure to methylmercury and the appearance of symptoms in adult poisoning cases tends to be extended. The longest recorded latent period is five months after a single exposure, in the Dartmouth case (see History); other latent periods in the range of weeks to months have also been reported. When the first symptom appears, typically paresthesia (a tingling or numbness in the skin), it is followed rapidly by more severe effects, sometimes ending in coma and death. The toxic damage appears to be determined by the peak value of mercury, not the length of the exposure.[31]

Methylmercury exposure during rodent gestation, a developmental period that approximately models human neural development during the first two trimesters of gestation,[32][33] has long-lasting behavioral consequences that appear in adulthood and, in some cases, may not appear until aging. Prefrontal cortex or dopamine neurotransmission could be especially sensitive to even subtle gestational methylmercury exposure[34] and suggests that public health assessments of methylmercury based on intellectual performance may underestimate the impact of methylmercury in public health.

Ethylmercury is a breakdown product of the antibacteriological agent ethylmercurithiosalicylate, which has been used as a topical antiseptic and a vaccine preservative (further discussed under Thiomersal below). Its characteristics have not been studied as extensively as those of methylmercury. It is cleared from the blood much more rapidly, with a half-life of seven to ten days, and it is metabolized much more quickly than methylmercury. It is presumed not to have methylmercury's ability to cross the blood–brain barrier via a transporter, but instead relies on simple diffusion to enter the brain.[28] Other exposure sources of organic mercury include phenylmercuric acetate and phenylmercuric nitrate. These compounds were used in indoor latex paints for their antimildew properties, but were removed in 1990 because of cases of toxicity.[28]

Inorganic mercury compounds edit

Mercury occurs as salts such as mercuric chloride (HgCl2) and mercurous chloride (Hg2Cl2), the latter also known as calomel. Because they are more soluble in water, mercuric salts are usually more acutely toxic than mercurous salts. Their higher solubility lets them be more readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract. Mercury salts affect primarily the gastrointestinal tract and the kidneys, and can cause severe kidney damage; however, as they cannot cross the blood–brain barrier easily, these salts inflict little neurological damage without continuous or heavy exposure.[35] Mercuric cyanide (Hg(CN)2) is a particularly toxic mercury compound that has been used in murders, as it contains not only mercury but also cyanide, leading to simultaneous cyanide poisoning.[36] The drug n-acetyl penicillamine has been used to treat mercury poisoning with limited success.[37]

Elemental mercury edit

Quicksilver (liquid metallic mercury) is poorly absorbed by ingestion and skin contact. Its vapor is the most hazardous form. Animal data indicate less than 0.01% of ingested mercury is absorbed through the intact gastrointestinal tract, though it may not be true for individuals with ileus. Cases of systemic toxicity from accidental swallowing are rare, and attempted suicide via intravenous injection does not appear to result in systemic toxicity,[31] though it still causes damage by physically blocking blood vessels both at the site of injection and the lungs. Though not studied quantitatively, the physical properties of liquid elemental mercury limit its absorption through intact skin and in light of its very low absorption rate from the gastrointestinal tract, skin absorption would not be high.[38] Some mercury vapor is absorbed dermally, but uptake by this route is only about 1% of that by inhalation.[39]

In humans, approximately 80% of inhaled mercury vapor is absorbed via the respiratory tract, where it enters the circulatory system and is distributed throughout the body.[40] Chronic exposure by inhalation, even at low concentrations in the range 0.7–42 μg/m3, has been shown in case–control studies to cause effects such as tremors, impaired cognitive skills, and sleep disturbance in workers.[41][42]

Acute inhalation of high concentrations causes a wide variety of cognitive, personality, sensory, and motor disturbances. The most prominent symptoms include tremors (initially affecting the hands and sometimes spreading to other parts of the body), emotional lability (characterized by irritability, excessive shyness, confidence loss, and nervousness), insomnia, memory loss, neuromuscular changes (weakness, muscle atrophy, muscle twitching), headaches, polyneuropathy (paresthesia, stocking-glove sensory loss, hyperactive tendon reflexes, slowed sensory and motor nerve conduction velocities), and performance deficits in tests of cognitive function.[38]

Mechanism edit

The toxicity of mercury sources can be expected to depend on its nature, i.e., salts vs. organomercury compounds vs. elemental mercury.

The primary mechanism of mercury toxicity involves its irreversible inhibition of selenoenzymes, such as thioredoxin reductase (IC50 = 9 nM).[43] Although it has many functions, thioredoxin reductase restores vitamins C and E, as well as a number of other important antioxidant molecules, back into their reduced forms, enabling them to counteract oxidative damage.[44] Since the rate of oxygen consumption is particularly high in brain tissues, production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is accentuated in these vital cells, making them particularly vulnerable to oxidative damage and especially dependent upon the antioxidant protection provided by selenoenzymes. High mercury exposures deplete the amount of cellular selenium available for the biosynthesis of thioredoxin reductase and other selenoenzymes that prevent and reverse oxidative damage,[45] which, if the depletion is severe and long lasting, results in brain cell dysfunctions that can ultimately cause death.

Mercury in its various forms is particularly harmful to fetuses as an environmental toxin in pregnancy, as well as to infants. Women who have been exposed to mercury in substantial excess of dietary selenium intakes during pregnancy are at risk of giving birth to children with serious birth defects, such as those seen in Minamata disease. Mercury exposures in excess of dietary selenium intakes in young children can have severe neurological consequences, preventing nerve sheaths from forming properly.

Exposure to methylmercury causes increased levels of antibodies sent to myelin basic protein (MBP), which is involved in the myelination of neurons, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), which is essential to many functions in the central nervous system (CNS).[46] This causes an autoimmmune response against MBP and GFAP and results in the degradation of neural myelin and general decline in function of the CNS.[47]

Diagnosis edit

Diagnosis of elemental or inorganic mercury poisoning involves determining the history of exposure, physical findings, and an elevated body burden of mercury. Although whole-blood mercury concentrations are typically less than 6 μg/L, diets rich in fish can result in blood mercury concentrations higher than 200 μg/L; it is not that useful to measure these levels for suspected cases of elemental or inorganic poisoning because of mercury's short half-life in the blood. If the exposure is chronic, urine levels can be obtained; 24-hour collections are more reliable than spot collections. It is difficult or impossible to interpret urine samples of people undergoing chelation therapy, as the therapy itself increases mercury levels in the samples.[48]

Diagnosis of organic mercury poisoning differs in that whole-blood or hair analysis is more reliable than urinary mercury levels.[48]

Prevention edit

Mercury poisoning can be prevented or minimized by eliminating or reducing exposure to mercury and mercury compounds. To that end, many governments and private groups have made efforts to heavily regulate the use of mercury, or to issue advisories about the use of mercury. Most countries have signed the Minamata Convention on Mercury.

The export from the European Union of mercury and some mercury compounds has been prohibited since 15 March 2011.[49] The European Union has banned most uses of mercury.[50] Mercury is allowed for fluorescent light bulbs because of pressure from countries such as Germany, the Netherlands and Hungary, which are connected to the main producers of fluorescent light bulbs: General Electric, Philips and Osram.[51]

US environmental limits[52]
Country Regulating agency Regulated activity Medium Type of mercury compound Type of limit Limit
US Occupational Safety and Health Administration occupational exposure air elemental mercury Ceiling (not to exceed) 0.1 mg/m3
US Occupational Safety and Health Administration occupational exposure air organic mercury Ceiling (not to exceed) 0.05 mg/m3
US Food and Drug Administration eating sea food methylmercury Maximum allowable concentration 1 ppm (1 mg/L)
US Environmental Protection Agency drinking water inorganic mercury Maximum contaminant level 2 ppb (0.002 mg/L)

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued recommendations in 2004 regarding exposure to mercury in fish and shellfish.[53] The EPA also developed the "Fish Kids" awareness campaign for children and young adults [54] on account of the greater impact of mercury exposure to that population.

Cleaning spilled mercury edit

 
EPA workers clean up residential mercury spill in 2004

Mercury thermometers and mercury light bulbs are not as common as they used to be, and the amount of mercury they contain is unlikely to be a health concern if handled carefully. However, broken items still require careful cleanup, as mercury can be hard to collect and it is easy to accidentally create a much larger exposure problem.[55] If available, powdered sulfur may be applied to the spill, in order to create a solid compound that is more easily removed from surfaces than liquid mercury.[56]

Treatment edit

Identifying and removing the source of the mercury is crucial. Decontamination requires removal of clothes, washing skin with soap and water, and flushing the eyes with saline solution as needed.

Before the advent of organic chelating agents, salts of iodide were given orally, such as heavily popularized by Louis Melsens and many nineteenth and early twentieth century doctors.[57][58]

Chelation therapy edit

Chelation therapy for acute inorganic mercury poisoning, a formerly common method, was done with DMSA, 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (DMPS), D-penicillamine (DPCN), or dimercaprol (BAL).[28] Only DMSA is FDA-approved for use in children for treating mercury poisoning. However, several studies found no clear clinical benefit from DMSA treatment for poisoning due to mercury vapor.[59] No chelator for methylmercury or ethylmercury is approved by the FDA; DMSA is the most frequently used for severe methylmercury poisoning, as it is given orally, has fewer side-effects, and has been found to be superior to BAL, DPCN, and DMPS.[28] α-Lipoic acid (ALA) has been shown to be protective against acute mercury poisoning in several mammalian species when it is given soon after exposure; correct dosage is required, as inappropriate dosages increase toxicity. Although it has been hypothesized that frequent low dosages of ALA may have potential as a mercury chelator, studies in rats have been contradictory.[60] Glutathione and N-acetylcysteine (NAC) are recommended by some physicians, but have been shown to increase mercury concentrations in the kidneys and the brain.[60]

Chelation therapy can be hazardous if administered incorrectly. In August 2005, an incorrect form of EDTA (edetate disodium) used for chelation therapy resulted in hypocalcemia, causing cardiac arrest that killed a five-year-old autistic boy.[61]

Other edit

Experimental animal and epidemiological study findings have confirmed the interaction between selenium and methylmercury. Instead of causing a decline in neurodevelopmental outcomes, epidemiological studies have found that improved nutrient (i.e., omega-3 fatty acids, selenium, iodine, vitamin D) intakes as a result of ocean fish consumption during pregnancy improves maternal and fetal outcomes.[62] For example, increased ocean fish consumption during pregnancy was associated with 4-6 point increases in child IQs.

Prognosis edit

Some of the toxic effects of mercury are partially or wholly reversible provided specific therapy is able to restore selenium availability to normal before tissue damage from oxidation becomes too extensive.[63] Autopsy findings point to a half-life of inorganic mercury in human brains of 27.4 years.[64] Heavy or prolonged exposure can do irreversible damage, in particular in fetuses, infants, and young children. Young's syndrome is believed to be a long-term consequence of early childhood mercury poisoning.[65]

Mercuric chloride may cause cancer as it has caused increases in several types of tumors in rats and mice, while methyl mercury has caused kidney tumors in male rats. The EPA has classified mercuric chloride and methyl mercury as possible human carcinogens (ATSDR, EPA)

Detection in biological fluids edit

Mercury may be measured in blood or urine to confirm a diagnosis of poisoning in hospitalized people or to assist in the forensic investigation in a case of fatal over dosage. Some analytical techniques are capable of distinguishing organic from inorganic forms of the metal. The concentrations in both fluids tend to reach high levels early after exposure to inorganic forms, while lower but very persistent levels are observed following exposure to elemental or organic mercury. Chelation therapy can cause a transient elevation of urine mercury levels.[66]

History edit

  • Neolithic artists using cinnabar show signs of mercury poisoning.[67]
  • Several Chinese emperors and other Chinese nobles are known or suspected to have died or been sickened by mercury poisoning after alchemists administered them "elixirs" to promote health, longevity, or immortality that contained either elemental mercury or (more commonly) cinnabar. Among the most prominent examples:
    • The first emperor of unified China, Qin Shi Huang, it is reported, died in 210 BC of ingesting mercury pills that were intended to give him eternal life.[68]
    • Emperor Xuānzong of Tang, one of the emperors of the late Tang dynasty of China, was prescribed "cinnabar that had been treated and subdued by fire" to achieve immortality.[69] Concerns that the prescription was having ill effects on the emperor's health and sanity were waved off by the imperial alchemists, who cited medical texts listing a number of the emperor's conditions (including itching, formication, swelling, and muscle weakness), today recognized as signs and symptoms of mercury poisoning, as evidence that the elixir was effectively treating the emperor's latent ailments.[69] Xuānzong became irritable and paranoid, and he seems to have ultimately died in 859 from the poisoning.[69]
  • In his Natural History, Pliny the Elder writes that "it is a fact generally admitted that [cinnabar] is a poison" and warns against using it in medicine, also noting that workers polishing it "tie on their face loose masks of bladder-skin, to prevent their inhaling the dust in breathing", one of the earliest mentions of PPE.[70]
  • Carl Scheele, a significant 18th century Swedish pioneer of chemical research, died from mercury poisoning arising from his work, at the relatively early age of 43.[71]
  • The phrase mad as a hatter is likely a reference to mercury poisoning among milliners (so-called "mad hatter disease"), as mercury-based compounds were once used in the manufacture of felt hats in the 18th and 19th century. (The Mad Hatter character of Alice in Wonderland was, it is presumed, inspired by an eccentric furniture dealer named Theophilus Carter. Carter was not a victim of mad hatter disease although Lewis Carroll would have been familiar with the phenomenon of dementia that occurred among hatters.)[72][73]
  • In 1810, two British ships, HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps, salvaged a large load of elemental mercury from a wrecked Spanish vessel near Cadiz, Spain. The bladders containing the mercury soon ruptured. The element spread about the ships in liquid and vapor forms. The sailors presented with neurologic compromises: tremor, paralysis, and excessive salivation as well as tooth loss, skin problems, and pulmonary complaints. In 1823 William Burnett, M.D. published a report on the effects of mercurial vapor.[74] Triumph's surgeon, Henry Plowman, had concluded that the ailments had arisen from inhaling the mercurialized atmosphere. His treatment was to order the lower deck gun ports to be opened, when it was safe to do so; sleeping on the orlop was forbidden; and no men slept in the lower deck if they were at all symptomatic. Windsails were set to channel fresh air into the lower decks day and night.[75]
  • Historically, gold-mercury amalgam was widely used in gilding, applied to the object and then heated to vaporize the mercury and deposit the gold, leading to numerous casualties among the workers. It is estimated that during the construction of Saint Isaac's Cathedral alone, 60 men died from the gilding of the main dome.[76][77]
  • For years, including the early part of his presidency, Abraham Lincoln took a common medicine of his time called "blue mass", which contained significant amounts of mercury.
  • On September 5, 1920, silent movie actress Olive Thomas ingested mercury capsules dissolved in an alcoholic solution at the Hotel Ritz in Paris.[78] There is still controversy over whether it was suicide, or whether she consumed the external preparation by mistake. Her husband, Jack Pickford (the brother of Mary Pickford), had syphilis, and the mercury was used as a treatment of the venereal disease at the time. She died a few days later at the American Hospital in Neuilly.[79]
  • An early scientific study of mercury poisoning was in 1923–1926 by the German inorganic chemist, Alfred Stock, who himself became poisoned, together with his colleagues, by breathing mercury vapor that was being released by his laboratory equipment—diffusion pumps, float valves, and manometers—all of which contained mercury, and also from mercury that had been accidentally spilt and remained in cracks in the linoleum floor covering. He published a number of papers on mercury poisoning, founded a committee in Berlin to study cases of possible mercury poisoning, and introduced the term micromercurialism.[80]
  • The term Hunter-Russell syndrome derives from a study of mercury poisoning among workers in a seed-packaging factory in Norwich, England in the late 1930s who breathed methylmercury that was being used as a seed disinfectant and pesticide.[81]
  • Outbreaks of methylmercury poisoning occurred in several places in Japan during the 1950s due to industrial discharges of mercury into rivers and coastal waters. The best-known instances were in Minamata and Niigata. In Minamata alone, more than 600 people died due to what became known as Minamata disease. More than 21,000 people filed claims with the Japanese government, of which almost 3000 became certified as having the disease. In 22 documented cases, pregnant women who consumed contaminated fish showed mild or no symptoms but gave birth to infants with severe developmental disabilities.[82]
  • Mercury poisoning of generations of Grassy Narrows and Whitedog native people in Ontario, Canada who were exposed to high levels of mercury by consuming mercury-contaminated fish when Dryden Chemical Company discharged over 9,000 kilograms (20,000 lb) of mercury directly into the WabigoonEnglish River system and continued with mercury air pollution until 1975.[83][84][85][86]
  • Widespread mercury poisoning occurred in rural Iraq in 1971–1972, when grain treated with a methylmercury-based fungicide that was intended for planting only was used by the rural population to make bread, causing at least 6530 cases of mercury poisoning and at least 459 deaths (see Basra poison grain disaster).[87]
  • On August 14, 1996, Karen Wetterhahn, a chemistry professor working at Dartmouth College, spilled a small amount of dimethylmercury on her latex glove. She began experiencing the symptoms of mercury poisoning five months later and, despite aggressive chelation therapy, died a few months later from a mercury induced neurodegenerative disease[26][27]
  • In April 2000, Alan Chmurny attempted to kill a former employee, Marta Bradley, by pouring mercury into the ventilation system of her car.[88][89]
  • On March 19, 2008, Tony Winnett, 55, inhaled mercury vapors while trying to extract gold from computer parts (by using liquid mercury to separate gold from the rest of the alloy), and died ten days later. His Oklahoma residence became so contaminated that it had to be gutted.[90][91]
  • In December 2008, actor Jeremy Piven was diagnosed with mercury poisoning possibly resulting from eating sushi twice a day for twenty years or from taking herbal remedies.[92]
  • In India, a study by Centre for Science and Environment and Indian Institute of Toxicology Research has found that in the country's energy capital Singrauli, mercury is slowly entering people's homes, food, water and even blood.[93]
  • The Minamata Convention on Mercury in 2016 announced that the signing of the "international treaty designed to protect human health and the environment from anthropogenic releases and emission of mercury and mercury compounds" on April 22, 2016—Earth Day. It was the sixtieth anniversary of the discovery of the disease.[94]

Infantile acrodynia edit

Infantile acrodynia (also known as "calomel disease", "erythredemic polyneuropathy", and "pink disease") is a type of mercury poisoning in children characterized by pain and pink discoloration of the hands and feet.[95] The word is derived from the Greek, where άκρο means end or extremity, and οδυνη means pain. Acrodynia resulted primarily from calomel in teething powders and decreased greatly after calomel was excluded from most teething powders in 1954.[96][97]

Acrodynia is difficult to diagnose; "it is most often postulated that the etiology of this syndrome is an idiosyncratic hypersensitivity reaction to mercury because of the lack of correlation with mercury levels, many of the symptoms resemble recognized mercury poisoning."[98]

Medicine edit

Mercury was once prescribed as a purgative.[99] Many mercury-containing compounds were once used in medicines. These include calomel (mercurous chloride), and mercuric chloride.

Thiomersal edit

In 1999, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) asked vaccine makers to remove the organomercury compound thiomersal (spelled "thimerosal" in the US) from vaccines as quickly as possible, and thiomersal has been phased out of US and European vaccines, except for some preparations of influenza vaccine.[100] The CDC and the AAP followed the precautionary principle, which assumes that there is no harm in exercising caution even if it later turns out to be unwarranted, but their 1999 action sparked confusion and controversy that thiomersal was a cause of autism.[100]

Since 2000, the thiomersal in child vaccines has been alleged to contribute to autism, and thousands of parents in the United States have pursued legal compensation from a federal fund.[101] A 2004 Institute of Medicine (IOM) committee favored rejecting any causal relationship between thiomersal-containing vaccines and autism.[102] Autism incidence rates increased steadily even after thiomersal was removed from childhood vaccines.[103] Currently there is no accepted scientific evidence that exposure to thiomersal is a factor in causing autism.[104]

Dental amalgam toxicity edit

Dental amalgam is a possible cause of low-level mercury poisoning due to its use in dental fillings. Discussion on the topic includes debates on whether amalgam should be used, with critics arguing that its toxic effects make it unsafe.

Cosmetics edit

Some skin whitening products contain the toxic mercury(II) chloride as the active ingredient. When applied, the chemical readily absorbs through the skin into the bloodstream.[105] The use of mercury in cosmetics is illegal in the United States. However, cosmetics containing mercury are often illegally imported. Following a certified case of mercury poisoning resulting from the use of an imported skin whitening product, the United States Food and Drug Administration warned against the use of such products.[106][107] Symptoms of mercury poisoning have resulted from the use of various mercury-containing cosmetic products.[31][108][109] The use of skin whitening products is especially popular amongst Asian women.[110] In Hong Kong in 2002, two products were discovered to contain between 9,000 and 60,000 times the recommended dose.[111]

Fluorescent lamps edit

Fluorescent lamps contain mercury, which is released when bulbs break. Mercury in bulbs is typically present as either elemental mercury liquid, vapor, or both, since the liquid evaporates at ambient temperature.[112] When broken indoors, bulbs may emit sufficient mercury vapor to present health concerns, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recommends evacuating and airing out a room for at least 15 minutes after breaking a fluorescent light bulb.[113] Breakage of multiple bulbs presents a greater concern. A 1987 report described a 23-month-old toddler who had anorexia, weight loss, irritability, profuse sweating, and peeling and redness of fingers and toes. This case of acrodynia was traced to exposure of mercury from a carton of 8-foot fluorescent light bulbs that had broken in a potting shed adjacent to the main nursery. The glass was cleaned up and discarded, but the child often used the area to play in.[114]

Assassination attempts edit

Mercury has, allegedly, been used at various times to assassinate people. In 2008, Russian lawyer Karinna Moskalenko claimed to have been poisoned by mercury left in her car,[115] while in 2010 journalists Viktor Kalashnikov and Marina Kalashnikova accused Russia's FSB of trying to poison them.[116]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Mercury". NIEHS. from the original on 19 November 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e Bose-O'Reilly S, McCarty KM, Steckling N, Lettmeier B (September 2010). "Mercury exposure and children's health". Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent Health Care. 40 (8): 186–215. doi:10.1016/j.cppeds.2010.07.002. PMC 3096006. PMID 20816346.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bernhoft RA (2012). "Mercury toxicity and treatment: a review of the literature". Journal of Environmental and Public Health. 2012: 460508. doi:10.1155/2012/460508. PMC 3253456. PMID 22235210.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Mercury and health". WHO. January 2016. from the original on 20 November 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Kosnett MJ (December 2013). "The role of chelation in the treatment of arsenic and mercury poisoning". Journal of Medical Toxicology. 9 (4): 347–54. doi:10.1007/s13181-013-0344-5. PMC 3846971. PMID 24178900.
  6. ^ Hong YS, Kim YM, Lee KE (November 2012). "Methylmercury exposure and health effects". Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health = Yebang Uihakhoe Chi. 45 (6): 353–63. doi:10.3961/jpmph.2012.45.6.353. PMC 3514465. PMID 23230465.
  7. ^ Environment, U. N. (2019-03-04). "Global Mercury Assessment 2018". UNEP - UN Environment Programme. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
  8. ^ Bernhoft, Robin A. (2012). "Mercury toxicity and treatment: a review of the literature". Journal of Environmental and Public Health. 2012: 460508. doi:10.1155/2012/460508. ISSN 1687-9813. PMC 3253456. PMID 22235210.
  9. ^ Spiller, Henry A. (May 2018). "Rethinking mercury: the role of selenium in the pathophysiology of mercury toxicity". Clinical Toxicology. 56 (5): 313–326. doi:10.1080/15563650.2017.1400555. ISSN 1556-9519. PMID 29124976. S2CID 4295652.
  10. ^ Johnson-Arbor, Kelly; Tefera, Eshetu; Farrell, John (June 2021). "Characteristics and treatment of elemental mercury intoxication: A case series". Health Science Reports. 4 (2): e293. doi:10.1002/hsr2.293. ISSN 2398-8835. PMC 8177896. PMID 34136656.
  11. ^ Horowitz Y, Greenberg D, Ling G, Lifshitz M (June 2002). "Acrodynia: a case report of two siblings". Archives of Disease in Childhood. 86 (6): 453. doi:10.1136/adc.86.6.453. PMC 1762992. PMID 12023189.
  12. ^ United States Environmental Protection Agency (December 1997). Mercury Study Report to Congress (PDF). Vol. 3. Washington, D.C.: United States Environmental Protection Agency. (PDF) from the original on 2011-02-03.
  13. ^ ATSDR Mercury ToxFAQ (April 1999). "ToxFAQs: Mercury" (PDF). Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Retrieved 2007-07-25.
  14. ^ Dufault R, LeBlanc B, Schnoll R, Cornett C, Schweitzer L, Wallinga D, et al. (January 2009). "Mercury from chlor-alkali plants: measured concentrations in food product sugar". Environmental Health. 8 (1): 2. doi:10.1186/1476-069X-8-2. PMC 2637263. PMID 19171026.
  15. ^ "Mercury in High-Fructose Corn Syrup?".
  16. ^ Levy M (August 1995). "Dental amalgam: toxicological evaluation and health risk assessment". Journal. 61 (8): 667–8, 671–4. PMID 7553398.
  17. ^ Goldman LR, Shannon MW (July 2001). "Technical report: mercury in the environment: implications for pediatricians". Pediatrics. 108 (1): 197–205. doi:10.1542/peds.108.1.197. PMID 11433078.
  18. ^ Mercury danger in dolphin meat. 2009 Archived 2012-06-30 at archive.today
  19. ^ "Mercury". 2013-07-08. from the original on 2015-04-08. Retrieved 2015-04-08.
  20. ^ Ballabio C, Jiskra M, Osterwalder S, Borrelli P, Montanarella L, Panagos P (May 2021). "A spatial assessment of mercury content in the European Union topsoil". The Science of the Total Environment. 769: 144755. Bibcode:2021ScTEn.769n4755B. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144755. PMC 8024745. PMID 33736262.
  21. ^ Pacyna EG, Pacyna JM, Steenhuisen F, Wilson S (2006). "Global anthropogenic mercury emission inventory for 2000". Atmos. Environ. 40 (22): 4048–63. Bibcode:2006AtmEn..40.4048P. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2006.03.041.
  22. ^ How mercury poisons gold miners and enters the food chain 2013-09-23 at the Wayback Machine, BBC News
  23. ^ United States Environmental Protection Agency (December 1997). Mercury Study Report to Congress (PDF). Vol. 4. Washington, D.C.: United States Environmental Protection Agency. (PDF) from the original on 2011-02-03.
  24. ^ Lynch E, Braithwaite R (July 2005). "A review of the clinical and toxicological aspects of 'traditional' (herbal) medicines adulterated with heavy metals". Expert Opinion on Drug Safety. 4 (4): 769–78. doi:10.1517/14740338.4.4.769. PMID 16011453. S2CID 19160044.
  25. ^ Ching FM (2007). Chinese Herbal Drug Research Trends. Nova Publishers. ISBN 9781600219283.
  26. ^ a b The Karen Wetterhahn story 2012-05-30 at the Wayback Machine – University of Bristol web page documenting her death, retrieved December 9, 2006.
  27. ^ a b OSHA update following Karen Wetterhahn's death 2015-07-11 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ a b c d e Clifton JC (April 2007). "Mercury exposure and public health". Pediatric Clinics of North America. 54 (2): 237–69, viii. doi:10.1016/j.pcl.2007.02.005. PMID 17448359.
  29. ^ What you need to know about mercury in fish and shellfish – Advice for women who might become pregnant women who are pregnant nursing mothers young children. 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine U.S. FDA and U.S. EPA Advisory EPA-823-F-04-009, March 2004.
  30. ^ Mozaffarian D, Rimm EB (October 2006). "Fish intake, contaminants, and human health: evaluating the risks and the benefits". JAMA. 296 (15): 1885–99. doi:10.1001/jama.296.15.1885. PMID 17047219.
  31. ^ a b c Clarkson TW, Magos L (September 2006). "The toxicology of mercury and its chemical compounds". Critical Reviews in Toxicology. 36 (8): 609–662. doi:10.1080/10408440600845619. PMID 16973445. S2CID 37652857.
  32. ^ Bayer SA, Altman J, Russo RJ, Zhang X (1993). "Timetables of neurogenesis in the human brain based on experimentally determined patterns in the rat". Neurotoxicology. 14 (1): 83–144. PMID 8361683.
  33. ^ Rice D, Barone S (June 2000). "Critical periods of vulnerability for the developing nervous system: evidence from humans and animal models". Environmental Health Perspectives. 108 Suppl 3 (3): 511–33. doi:10.2307/3454543. JSTOR 3454543. PMC 1637807. PMID 10852851.
  34. ^ Newland MC, Reed MN, Rasmussen E (May 2015). "A hypothesis about how early developmental methylmercury exposure disrupts behavior in adulthood". Behavioural Processes. 114: 41–51. doi:10.1016/j.beproc.2015.03.007. PMC 4407818. PMID 25795099.
  35. ^ Langford N, Ferner R (October 1999). "Toxicity of mercury". Journal of Human Hypertension. 13 (10): 651–6. doi:10.1038/sj.jhh.1000896. PMID 10516733. S2CID 37322483.
  36. ^ Emsley, John. The Elements of Murder. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-19-280599-1
  37. ^ "Mercuric Cyanide." 1987. "Mercuric Cyanide". from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved 2011-02-22. (accessed April 2, 2009).
  38. ^ a b ATSDR. 1999. Toxicological Profile for Mercury. Atlanta, GA:Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-02-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  39. ^ Hursh JB, Clarkson TW, Miles EF, Goldsmith LA (1989). "Percutaneous absorption of mercury vapor by man". Archives of Environmental Health. 44 (2): 120–7. doi:10.1080/00039896.1989.9934385. PMID 2494955.
  40. ^ Cherian MG, Hursh JB, Clarkson TW, Allen J (1978). "Radioactive mercury distribution in biological fluids and excretion in human subjects after inhalation of mercury vapor". Archives of Environmental Health. 33 (3): 109–14. doi:10.1080/00039896.1978.10667318. PMID 686833.
  41. ^ Ngim CH, Foo SC, Boey KW, Jeyaratnam J (November 1992). "Chronic neurobehavioural effects of elemental mercury in dentists". British Journal of Industrial Medicine. 49 (11): 782–90. doi:10.1136/oem.49.11.782. PMC 1039326. PMID 1463679.
  42. ^ Liang YX, Sun RK, Sun Y, Chen ZQ, Li LH (February 1993). "Psychological effects of low exposure to mercury vapor: application of a computer-administered neurobehavioral evaluation system". Environmental Research. 60 (2): 320–7. Bibcode:1993ER.....60..320L. doi:10.1006/enrs.1993.1040. PMID 8472661.
  43. ^ Carvalho CM, Chew EH, Hashemy SI, Lu J, Holmgren A (May 2008). "Inhibition of the human thioredoxin system. A molecular mechanism of mercury toxicity". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 283 (18): 11913–23. doi:10.1074/jbc.m710133200. PMID 18321861. S2CID 1318126.
  44. ^ Linster CL, Van Schaftingen E (January 2007). "Vitamin C. Biosynthesis, recycling and degradation in mammals". The FEBS Journal. 274 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2006.05607.x. PMID 17222174. S2CID 21345196.
  45. ^ Ralston NV, Raymond LJ (November 2010). "Dietary selenium's protective effects against methylmercury toxicity". Toxicology. 278 (1): 112–23. doi:10.1016/j.tox.2010.06.004. PMID 20561558.
  46. ^ da Silva, Diane Cleydes Baía; Bittencourt, Leonardo Oliveira; Baia-da-Silva, Daiane Claydes; Chemelo, Victoria Santos; Eiró-Quirino, Luciana; Nascimento, Priscila Cunha; Silva, Márcia Cristina Freitas; Freire, Marco Aurelio M.; Gomes-Leal, Walace; Crespo-Lopez, Maria Elena; Lima, Rafael Rodrigues (2022-03-29). "Methylmercury Causes Neurodegeneration and Downregulation of Myelin Basic Protein in the Spinal Cord of Offspring Rats after Maternal Exposure". International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 23 (7): 3777. doi:10.3390/ijms23073777. ISSN 1422-0067. PMC 8998727. PMID 35409136.
  47. ^ el-Fawal HA, Gong Z, Little AR, Evans HL (1996). "Exposure to methyl mercury results in serum autoantibodies to neurotypic and gliotypic proteins". Neurotoxicology. 17 (1): 267–76. PMID 8784838.
  48. ^ a b Ibrahim D, Froberg B, Wolf A, Rusyniak DE (March 2006). "Heavy metal poisoning: clinical presentations and pathophysiology". Clinics in Laboratory Medicine. 26 (1): 67–97, viii. doi:10.1016/j.cll.2006.02.003. PMID 16567226.
  49. ^ (Press release). European Parliament. 2008-05-21. Archived from the original on 2008-09-25. Retrieved 2008-06-10.
  50. ^ "Mercury - Industry - Environment -European Commission".
  51. ^ "EU states clash over use of toxic mercury in light bulbs". TheGuardian.com. 7 February 2020.
  52. ^ ATSDR – Mercury – Regulations and Advisories 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ FDA/EPA 2004 Advice on What You Need to Know About Mercury in Fish and Shellfish 2009-03-08 at the Wayback Machine
  54. ^ EPA Fish Kids Flash-based movie 2008-10-11 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ Cleaning Up Spilled Mercury 2016-04-03 at the Wayback Machine
  56. ^ "What to Do if a Mercury Thermometer Breaks". US Environmental Protection Agency. 2015-08-18. Retrieved 2018-03-22.
  57. ^ "Sur l'emploi de l'iodure de potassium pour combattre les affections saturnines et mercurielles", in Annales de chimie et de physique, t. 26, 3e série, 1849.
  58. ^ "On the Employment of Iodide of Potassium as a Remedy for the Affections Caused by Lead and Mercury", in Br Foreign Med Chir Rev. 1853 Jan; 11(21): 201–224.
  59. ^ Risher JF, Amler SN (August 2005). "Mercury exposure: evaluation and intervention the inappropriate use of chelating agents in the diagnosis and treatment of putative mercury poisoning". Neurotoxicology. 26 (4): 691–9. doi:10.1016/j.neuro.2005.05.004. PMID 16009427.
  60. ^ a b Rooney JP (May 2007). "The role of thiols, dithiols, nutritional factors and interacting ligands in the toxicology of mercury". Toxicology. 234 (3): 145–56. doi:10.1016/j.tox.2007.02.016. PMID 17408840.
  61. ^ Hazards of chelation therapy:
    • Brown MJ, Willis T, Omalu B, Leiker R (August 2006). "Deaths resulting from hypocalcemia after administration of edetate disodium: 2003-2005". Pediatrics. 118 (2): e534-6. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-0858. PMID 16882789. S2CID 28656831. from the original on 2009-07-27.
    • Baxter AJ, Krenzelok EP (December 2008). "Pediatric fatality secondary to EDTA chelation". Clinical Toxicology. 46 (10): 1083–4. doi:10.1080/15563650701261488. PMID 18949650. S2CID 24576683.
  62. ^ Spiller HA (May 2018). "Rethinking mercury: the role of selenium in the pathophysiology of mercury toxicity". Clinical Toxicology. 56 (5): 313–326. doi:10.1080/15563650.2017.1400555. PMC 4856720. PMID 29124976.
  63. ^ Ralston NV, Kaneko JJ, Raymond LJ (September 2019). "Selenium health benefit values provide a reliable index of seafood benefits vs. risks". Journal of Trace Elements in Medicine and Biology. 55 (5): 50–57. doi:10.1016/j.jtemb.2019.05.009. PMID 31345365. S2CID 190878923.
  64. ^ Rooney JP (February 2014). "The retention time of inorganic mercury in the brain--a systematic review of the evidence". Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology. 274 (3): 425–35. doi:10.1016/j.taap.2013.12.011. hdl:2262/68176. PMID 24368178.
  65. ^ Hendry WF, A'Hern RP, Cole PJ (1993). "Was Young's syndrome caused by exposure to mercury in childhood?". BMJ. 307 (6919): 1579–82. doi:10.1136/bmj.307.6919.1579. PMC 1697782. PMID 8292944.
  66. ^ R. Baselt, Disposition of Toxic Drugs and Chemicals in Man, 8th edition, Biomedical Publications, Foster City, CA, 2008, pp. 923–927.
  67. ^ Kindy, David (19 November 2021). "Earliest Evidence of Mercury Poisoning in Humans Found in 5,000-Year-Old Bones". Smithsonian. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  68. ^ Zhao HL, Zhu X, Sui Y (August 2006). "The short-lived Chinese emperors". Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 54 (8): 1295–6. doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2006.00821.x. PMID 16914004. S2CID 31630319.
  69. ^ a b c Chris Stewart (22 January 2017). "#116-Tang 28: I, Xuānzong". The History of China (Podcast). Agora Podcast Network. Event occurs at 29:30. from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 24 January 2017.
  70. ^ "Pliny the Elder's Contribution to Toxicology & Occupational Health & Safety". Online Safety Trainer. 2023-03-29. Retrieved 2024-01-03.
  71. ^ Castle, Frederick A.; Rice, Charles, eds. (1886). "Carl Wilhelm Scheele". American Druggist. New York. 15 (August): 157–158. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  72. ^ Waldron HA (1983). "Did the Mad Hatter have mercury poisoning?". British Medical Journal. 287 (6409): 1961. doi:10.1136/bmj.287.6409.1961. PMC 1550196. PMID 6418283.
  73. ^ Kitzmiller KJ. . Archived from the original on 2013-12-02.
  74. ^ An Account of the Effect of Mercurial Vapors on the Crew of His Majesty's Ship Triumph, in the year 1810. By Wm. Burnett, M.D. one of the Medical Commissioners of the Navy, formerly Physician and Inspector of Hospitals to the Mediterranean Fleet.
  75. ^ Michael J. Doherty MD: The Quicksilver Prize: Mercury vapor poisoning aboard HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps (2003).
  76. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-28.
  77. ^ "An article about gilding". from the original on 2013-10-23.
  78. ^ "Bichloride of Mercury Killed Olive Thomas". The Toronto World. September 15, 1920. p. 6. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  79. ^ Foster, Charles (2000). Stardust and Shadows: Canadians in Early Hollywood, page 257. Toronto, Canada: Dundurn Press, 2000. ISBN 978-1550023480.
  80. ^ Stock A (1926). "Die Gefaehrlichkeit des Quecksilberdampfes". Zeitschrift für Angewandte Chemie. 39 (15): 461–466. Bibcode:1926AngCh..39..461S. doi:10.1002/ange.19260391502.
  81. ^ Hunter D, Bomford RR, Russell DS (1940). "Poisoning by methylmercury compounds". Quarterly Journal of Medicine. 9: 193–213.
  82. ^ Davidson PW, Myers GJ, Weiss B (April 2004). "Mercury exposure and child development outcomes". Pediatrics. 113 (4 Suppl): 1023–9. doi:10.1542/peds.113.S3.1023. PMID 15060195. S2CID 6597018. from the original on 2012-12-16.
  83. ^ McDonald A. "Indigenous peoples' vulnerabilities exposed: Lessons learned from Canada's Minamata incident: An Environmental analysis based on the case study of methyl-mercury pollution in northwestern Ontario, Canada". (PDF). Japanese Association for Canadian Studies. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 14, 2007. Retrieved December 14, 2007.
  84. ^ D'ltri PA, D'ltr FM (January 1, 1978). "Mercury contamination: A human tragedy". Environmental Management. 2 (1): 3–16. Bibcode:1978EnMan...2....3D. doi:10.1007/BF01866442. ISSN 1432-1009. S2CID 153666705. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  85. ^ Bruser D, Poisson J (November 11, 2017). "Ontario knew about Grassy Narrows mercury site for decades, but kept it secret". The Toronto Star. ISSN 0319-0781. Retrieved 2017-12-16.
  86. ^ Porter J (2016). "Children of the poisoned river". CBC News. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  87. ^ Engler R (April 27, 1985). "Technology out of Control". The Nation. 240. from the original on March 17, 2011.
  88. ^ Vargas JA (2007-01-26). "'Mad Scientist': On Court TV, Fatal Chemistry". The Washington Post. from the original on 2012-11-08. Retrieved 2007-01-28.
  89. ^ Perl, Peter (2002-02-03). "Obsession". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2021-08-28.
  90. ^ Swearengin, M. (2008-04-01). "Man dies from mercury poisoning after trying to extract gold". Durant Daily Democrat.
  91. ^ "Colbert man dies from mercury poisoning". Tulsa World. Associated Press. 2008-04-01. Retrieved 2019-05-18.
  92. ^ Tiffany McGee (2009-01-15). "Jeremy Piven Explains His Mystery Ailment". People. from the original on 2009-01-21. Retrieved 2009-01-15.
  93. ^ "Death in India lurks in poisoned water on the rim of coal fields". 5 December 2014. from the original on 2017-10-15. Retrieved 2017-10-15.
  94. ^ Coulter MA (January 20, 2017). "Minamata Convention on Mercury". Cambridge. Cambridge University Press. 55 (3): 582–616. doi:10.5305/intelegamate.55.3.0582. S2CID 132189787.
  95. ^ James WD, Berger TG, Elston DM (2006). Andrews' diseases of the skin: clinical dermatology (10th ed.). Saunders. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-7216-2921-6.
  96. ^ Bjørklund G (1995). "Mercury and Acrodynia" (PDF). Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine. 10 (3 & 4): 145–146. (PDF) from the original on 2011-07-21.
  97. ^ Dally A (August 1997). "The rise and fall of pink disease". Social History of Medicine. 10 (2): 291–304. doi:10.1093/shm/10.2.291. PMID 11619497.
  98. ^ Ford M, Delaney KA, Ling L, Erickson T (2000). Clinical Toxicology (1st ed.). Saunders. ISBN 978-0-7216-5485-0.
  99. ^ Bartholow, Roberts (1879). A practical treatise on materia medica and therapeutics. Appleton. p. 200.
  100. ^ a b Offit PA (September 2007). "Thimerosal and vaccines – a cautionary tale". The New England Journal of Medicine. 357 (13): 1278–79. doi:10.1056/NEJMp078187. PMID 17898096.
  101. ^ Sugarman SD (September 2007). "Cases in vaccine court – legal battles over vaccines and autism". The New England Journal of Medicine. 357 (13): 1275–1277. doi:10.1056/NEJMp078168. PMID 17898095.
  102. ^ Immunization Safety Review Committee (2004). Immunization Safety Review: Vaccines and Autism. The National Academies Press. doi:10.17226/10997. ISBN 978-0-309-09237-1. PMID 20669467. from the original on 2012-07-04.
  103. ^ Gerber JS, Offit PA (February 2009). "Vaccines and autism: a tale of shifting hypotheses". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 48 (4): 456–461. doi:10.1086/596476. PMC 2908388. PMID 19128068.
  104. ^ Doja A, Roberts W (November 2006). "Immunizations and autism: a review of the literature". The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences. 33 (4): 341–346. doi:10.1017/s031716710000528x. PMID 17168158.
  105. ^ Counter SA (December 16, 2003). Whitening skin can be deadly. The Boston Globe. from the original on September 1, 2009.
  106. ^ "FDA Proposes Hydroquinone Ban". from the original on 2007-07-03.FDA bans hydroquinone in skin whitening products
  107. ^ . January 27, 2005. Archived from the original on May 24, 2007.
  108. ^ Counter SA, Buchanan LH. "Mercury exposure in children: a review". Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology. 198 (2). doi:10.1016/j.taap.2003.11.032.
  109. ^ Mahaffey KR (2005). "Exposure to Mercury in the Americas". Dynamics of Mercury Pollution on Regional and Global Scales. Springer. pp. 345–384. doi:10.1007/0-387-24494-8_15. ISBN 978-0-387-24493-8.
  110. ^ In a survey, 28% of Koreans and 50% of Philippians say that they use skin whitening products.. Archived from the original on 2007-05-25.
  111. ^ Bray M (2002-05-15). SKIN DEEP: Dying to be white. CNN. from the original on 2010-04-08. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
  112. ^ Aucott M, McLinden M, Winka M (February 2003). "Release of mercury from broken fluorescent bulbs". Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association. 53 (2): 143–51. doi:10.1080/10473289.2003.10466132. PMID 12617289. S2CID 9263443.
  113. ^ "Spills, disposal and site cleanup". U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 2009-07-13. from the original on 2009-07-01. Retrieved 2009-06-30.
  114. ^ Tunnessen WW, McMahon KJ, Baser M (May 1987). "Acrodynia: exposure to mercury from fluorescent light bulbs". Pediatrics. 79 (5): 786–789. doi:10.1542/peds.79.5.786. PMID 3575038. S2CID 36523101.
  115. ^ Gutterman, Steve (15 October 2008). "Russian lawyer suspects mercury poisoning". USA Today. Associated Press. from the original on 2011-12-17.
  116. ^ Allen, Nick (27 December 2010). "German inquiry into 'poisoning' of Russian dissidents". The Telegraph. from the original on 2010-12-29.

External links edit

  • Hazardous Substances: Mercury at Curlie
  • Toxic Substances: Mercury at Curlie

mercury, poisoning, confused, with, heavy, metal, poisoning, song, graham, parker, mercury, poisoning, type, metal, poisoning, exposure, mercury, symptoms, depend, upon, type, dose, method, duration, exposure, they, include, muscle, weakness, poor, coordinatio. Not to be confused with Heavy metal poisoning For the song by Graham Parker see Mercury Poisoning Mercury poisoning is a type of metal poisoning due to exposure to mercury 3 Symptoms depend upon the type dose method and duration of exposure 3 4 They may include muscle weakness poor coordination numbness in the hands and feet skin rashes anxiety memory problems trouble speaking trouble hearing or trouble seeing 1 High level exposure to methylmercury is known as Minamata disease 2 Methylmercury exposure in children may result in acrodynia pink disease in which the skin becomes pink and peels 2 Long term complications may include kidney problems and decreased intelligence 2 The effects of long term low dose exposure to methylmercury are unclear 6 Mercury poisoningOther namesMercury toxicity mercury overdose mercury intoxication hydrargyria mercurialismThe bulb of a mercury in glass thermometerSpecialtyToxicologySymptomsMuscle weakness poor coordination numbness in the hands and feet 1 ComplicationsKidney problems decreased intelligence 2 CausesExposure to mercury 1 Risk factorsConsumption of fish which may contain mercury 3 Diagnostic methodDifficult 3 PreventionDecreasing use of mercury low mercury diet 4 MedicationAcute poisoning dimercaptosuccinic acid DMSA dimercaptopropane sulfonate DMPS 5 Forms of mercury exposure include metal vapor salt and organic compound 3 Most exposure is from eating fish amalgam based dental fillings or exposure at a workplace 3 In fish those higher up in the food chain generally have higher levels of mercury a process known as biomagnification 3 Less commonly poisoning may occur as a method of attempted suicide 3 Human activities that release mercury into the environment include the burning of coal and mining of gold 4 7 Tests of the blood urine and hair for mercury are available but do not relate well to the amount in the body 3 Prevention includes eating a diet low in mercury removing mercury from medical and other devices proper disposal of mercury and not mining further mercury 4 2 In those with acute poisoning from inorganic mercury salts chelation with either dimercaptosuccinic acid DMSA or dimercaptopropane sulfonate DMPS appears to improve outcomes if given within a few hours of exposure 5 Chelation for those with long term exposure is of unclear benefit 5 In certain communities that survive on fishing rates of mercury poisoning among children have been as high as 1 7 per 100 4 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 2 Causes 2 1 Sources 2 1 1 Methylmercury and related organomercury compounds 2 1 2 Inorganic mercury compounds 2 1 3 Elemental mercury 3 Mechanism 4 Diagnosis 5 Prevention 5 1 Cleaning spilled mercury 6 Treatment 6 1 Chelation therapy 6 2 Other 7 Prognosis 7 1 Detection in biological fluids 8 History 8 1 Infantile acrodynia 8 2 Medicine 8 2 1 Thiomersal 8 2 2 Dental amalgam toxicity 8 3 Cosmetics 8 4 Fluorescent lamps 8 5 Assassination attempts 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksSigns and symptoms editCommon symptoms of mercury poisoning are peripheral neuropathy presenting as paresthesia or itching burning pain or even a sensation that resembles small insects crawling on or under the skin formication skin discoloration pink cheeks fingertips and toes swelling and desquamation shedding or peeling of skin 8 Mercury irreversibly inhibits selenium dependent enzymes see below and may also inactivate S adenosyl methionine which is necessary for catecholamine catabolism by catechol O methyl transferase Due to the body s inability to degrade catecholamines e g adrenaline a person with mercury poisoning may experience profuse sweating tachycardia persistently faster than normal heart beat increased salivation and hypertension high blood pressure 9 Affected children may show red cheeks nose and lips loss of hair teeth and nails transient rashes hypotonia muscle weakness and increased sensitivity to light Other symptoms may include kidney dysfunction e g Fanconi syndrome or neuropsychiatric symptoms such as emotional lability memory impairment or insomnia 10 Thus the clinical presentation may resemble pheochromocytoma or Kawasaki disease Desquamation skin peeling can occur with severe mercury poisoning acquired by handling elemental mercury 11 Causes editConsumption of fish containing mercury is by far the most significant source of ingestion related mercury exposure in humans although plants and livestock also contain mercury due to bioconcentration of organic mercury from seawater freshwater marine and lacustrine sediments soils and atmosphere and due to biomagnification by ingesting other mercury containing organisms 12 Exposure to mercury can occur from breathing contaminated air 13 from eating foods that have acquired mercury residues during processing 14 15 from exposure to mercury vapor in mercury amalgam dental restorations 16 and from improper use or disposal of mercury and mercury containing objects for example after spills of elemental mercury or improper disposal of fluorescent lamps 17 All of these except elemental liquid mercury produce toxicity or death with less than a gram Mercury s zero oxidation state Hg0 exists as vapor or as liquid metal its mercurous state Hg exists as inorganic salts and its mercuric state Hg2 may form either inorganic salts or organomercury compounds citation needed Consumption of whale and dolphin meat as is the practice in Japan is a source of high levels of mercury poisoning Tetsuya Endo a professor at the Health Sciences University of Hokkaido has tested whale meat purchased in the whaling town of Taiji and found mercury levels more than 20 times the acceptable Japanese standard 18 Human generated sources such as coal burning power plants 19 emit about half of atmospheric mercury with natural sources such as volcanoes responsible for the remainder A 2021 publication investigating the mercury distribution in European soils found that high mercury concentrations are found close to abandoned mines such as Almaden Castilla La Mancha Spain Mt Amiata Italy Idrija Slovenia and Rudnany Slovakia and coal fired power plants 20 An estimated two thirds of human generated mercury comes from stationary combustion mostly of coal Other important human generated sources include gold production nonferrous metal production cement production waste disposal human crematoria caustic soda production pig iron and steel production mercury production mostly for batteries and biomass burning 21 Small independent gold mining operation workers are at higher risk of mercury poisoning because of crude processing methods Such is the danger for the galamsey in Ghana and similar workers known as orpailleurs in neighboring francophone countries While no official government estimates of the labor force have been made observers believe 20 000 50 000 work as galamseys in Ghana a figure including many women who work as porters Similar problems have been reported amongst the gold miners of Indonesia 22 Some mercury compounds especially organomercury compounds can also be readily absorbed through direct skin contact Mercury and its compounds are commonly used in chemical laboratories hospitals dental clinics and facilities involved in the production of items such as fluorescent light bulbs batteries and explosives 23 Many traditional medicines including ones used in Ayurvedic medicine and Traditional Chinese medicine contain mercury and other heavy metals 24 25 Sources edit Organic compounds of mercury tend to be much more toxic than either the elemental form or the salts These compounds have been implicated in causing brain and liver damage The most dangerous mercury compound dimethylmercury is so toxic that even a few microliters spilled on the skin or even on a latex glove can cause death 26 27 Methylmercury and related organomercury compounds edit Main article Mercury in fish Methylmercury is the major source of organic mercury for all individuals 28 Due to bioaccumulation it works its way up through the food web and thus biomagnifies resulting in high concentrations among populations of some species Top predatory fish such as tuna or swordfish are usually of greater concern than smaller species The US FDA and the EPA advise women of child bearing age nursing mothers and young children to completely avoid swordfish shark king mackerel and tilefish from the Gulf of Mexico and to limit consumption of albacore white tuna to no more than 170 g 6 oz per week and of all other fish and shellfish to no more than 340 g 12 oz per week 29 A 2006 review of the risks and benefits of fish consumption found for adults the benefits of one to two servings of fish per week outweigh the risks even except for a few fish species for women of childbearing age and that avoidance of fish consumption could result in significant excess coronary heart disease deaths and suboptimal neural development in children 30 Because the process of mercury dependent sequestration of selenium is slow the period between exposure to methylmercury and the appearance of symptoms in adult poisoning cases tends to be extended The longest recorded latent period is five months after a single exposure in the Dartmouth case see History other latent periods in the range of weeks to months have also been reported When the first symptom appears typically paresthesia a tingling or numbness in the skin it is followed rapidly by more severe effects sometimes ending in coma and death The toxic damage appears to be determined by the peak value of mercury not the length of the exposure 31 Methylmercury exposure during rodent gestation a developmental period that approximately models human neural development during the first two trimesters of gestation 32 33 has long lasting behavioral consequences that appear in adulthood and in some cases may not appear until aging Prefrontal cortex or dopamine neurotransmission could be especially sensitive to even subtle gestational methylmercury exposure 34 and suggests that public health assessments of methylmercury based on intellectual performance may underestimate the impact of methylmercury in public health Ethylmercury is a breakdown product of the antibacteriological agent ethylmercurithiosalicylate which has been used as a topical antiseptic and a vaccine preservative further discussed under Thiomersal below Its characteristics have not been studied as extensively as those of methylmercury It is cleared from the blood much more rapidly with a half life of seven to ten days and it is metabolized much more quickly than methylmercury It is presumed not to have methylmercury s ability to cross the blood brain barrier via a transporter but instead relies on simple diffusion to enter the brain 28 Other exposure sources of organic mercury include phenylmercuric acetate and phenylmercuric nitrate These compounds were used in indoor latex paints for their antimildew properties but were removed in 1990 because of cases of toxicity 28 Inorganic mercury compounds edit Mercury occurs as salts such as mercuric chloride HgCl2 and mercurous chloride Hg2Cl2 the latter also known as calomel Because they are more soluble in water mercuric salts are usually more acutely toxic than mercurous salts Their higher solubility lets them be more readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract Mercury salts affect primarily the gastrointestinal tract and the kidneys and can cause severe kidney damage however as they cannot cross the blood brain barrier easily these salts inflict little neurological damage without continuous or heavy exposure 35 Mercuric cyanide Hg CN 2 is a particularly toxic mercury compound that has been used in murders as it contains not only mercury but also cyanide leading to simultaneous cyanide poisoning 36 The drug n acetyl penicillamine has been used to treat mercury poisoning with limited success 37 Elemental mercury edit Quicksilver liquid metallic mercury is poorly absorbed by ingestion and skin contact Its vapor is the most hazardous form Animal data indicate less than 0 01 of ingested mercury is absorbed through the intact gastrointestinal tract though it may not be true for individuals with ileus Cases of systemic toxicity from accidental swallowing are rare and attempted suicide via intravenous injection does not appear to result in systemic toxicity 31 though it still causes damage by physically blocking blood vessels both at the site of injection and the lungs Though not studied quantitatively the physical properties of liquid elemental mercury limit its absorption through intact skin and in light of its very low absorption rate from the gastrointestinal tract skin absorption would not be high 38 Some mercury vapor is absorbed dermally but uptake by this route is only about 1 of that by inhalation 39 In humans approximately 80 of inhaled mercury vapor is absorbed via the respiratory tract where it enters the circulatory system and is distributed throughout the body 40 Chronic exposure by inhalation even at low concentrations in the range 0 7 42 mg m3 has been shown in case control studies to cause effects such as tremors impaired cognitive skills and sleep disturbance in workers 41 42 Acute inhalation of high concentrations causes a wide variety of cognitive personality sensory and motor disturbances The most prominent symptoms include tremors initially affecting the hands and sometimes spreading to other parts of the body emotional lability characterized by irritability excessive shyness confidence loss and nervousness insomnia memory loss neuromuscular changes weakness muscle atrophy muscle twitching headaches polyneuropathy paresthesia stocking glove sensory loss hyperactive tendon reflexes slowed sensory and motor nerve conduction velocities and performance deficits in tests of cognitive function 38 Mechanism editThe toxicity of mercury sources can be expected to depend on its nature i e salts vs organomercury compounds vs elemental mercury The primary mechanism of mercury toxicity involves its irreversible inhibition of selenoenzymes such as thioredoxin reductase IC50 9 nM 43 Although it has many functions thioredoxin reductase restores vitamins C and E as well as a number of other important antioxidant molecules back into their reduced forms enabling them to counteract oxidative damage 44 Since the rate of oxygen consumption is particularly high in brain tissues production of reactive oxygen species ROS is accentuated in these vital cells making them particularly vulnerable to oxidative damage and especially dependent upon the antioxidant protection provided by selenoenzymes High mercury exposures deplete the amount of cellular selenium available for the biosynthesis of thioredoxin reductase and other selenoenzymes that prevent and reverse oxidative damage 45 which if the depletion is severe and long lasting results in brain cell dysfunctions that can ultimately cause death Mercury in its various forms is particularly harmful to fetuses as an environmental toxin in pregnancy as well as to infants Women who have been exposed to mercury in substantial excess of dietary selenium intakes during pregnancy are at risk of giving birth to children with serious birth defects such as those seen in Minamata disease Mercury exposures in excess of dietary selenium intakes in young children can have severe neurological consequences preventing nerve sheaths from forming properly Exposure to methylmercury causes increased levels of antibodies sent to myelin basic protein MBP which is involved in the myelination of neurons and glial fibrillary acidic protein GFAP which is essential to many functions in the central nervous system CNS 46 This causes an autoimmmune response against MBP and GFAP and results in the degradation of neural myelin and general decline in function of the CNS 47 Diagnosis editDiagnosis of elemental or inorganic mercury poisoning involves determining the history of exposure physical findings and an elevated body burden of mercury Although whole blood mercury concentrations are typically less than 6 mg L diets rich in fish can result in blood mercury concentrations higher than 200 mg L it is not that useful to measure these levels for suspected cases of elemental or inorganic poisoning because of mercury s short half life in the blood If the exposure is chronic urine levels can be obtained 24 hour collections are more reliable than spot collections It is difficult or impossible to interpret urine samples of people undergoing chelation therapy as the therapy itself increases mercury levels in the samples 48 Diagnosis of organic mercury poisoning differs in that whole blood or hair analysis is more reliable than urinary mercury levels 48 Prevention editMercury poisoning can be prevented or minimized by eliminating or reducing exposure to mercury and mercury compounds To that end many governments and private groups have made efforts to heavily regulate the use of mercury or to issue advisories about the use of mercury Most countries have signed the Minamata Convention on Mercury The export from the European Union of mercury and some mercury compounds has been prohibited since 15 March 2011 49 The European Union has banned most uses of mercury 50 Mercury is allowed for fluorescent light bulbs because of pressure from countries such as Germany the Netherlands and Hungary which are connected to the main producers of fluorescent light bulbs General Electric Philips and Osram 51 The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message US environmental limits 52 Country Regulating agency Regulated activity Medium Type of mercury compound Type of limit LimitUS Occupational Safety and Health Administration occupational exposure air elemental mercury Ceiling not to exceed 0 1 mg m3US Occupational Safety and Health Administration occupational exposure air organic mercury Ceiling not to exceed 0 05 mg m3US Food and Drug Administration eating sea food methylmercury Maximum allowable concentration 1 ppm 1 mg L US Environmental Protection Agency drinking water inorganic mercury Maximum contaminant level 2 ppb 0 002 mg L The United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA issued recommendations in 2004 regarding exposure to mercury in fish and shellfish 53 The EPA also developed the Fish Kids awareness campaign for children and young adults 54 on account of the greater impact of mercury exposure to that population Cleaning spilled mercury edit nbsp EPA workers clean up residential mercury spill in 2004Mercury thermometers and mercury light bulbs are not as common as they used to be and the amount of mercury they contain is unlikely to be a health concern if handled carefully However broken items still require careful cleanup as mercury can be hard to collect and it is easy to accidentally create a much larger exposure problem 55 If available powdered sulfur may be applied to the spill in order to create a solid compound that is more easily removed from surfaces than liquid mercury 56 Treatment editIdentifying and removing the source of the mercury is crucial Decontamination requires removal of clothes washing skin with soap and water and flushing the eyes with saline solution as needed Before the advent of organic chelating agents salts of iodide were given orally such as heavily popularized by Louis Melsens and many nineteenth and early twentieth century doctors 57 58 Chelation therapy edit Chelation therapy for acute inorganic mercury poisoning a formerly common method was done with DMSA 2 3 dimercapto 1 propanesulfonic acid DMPS D penicillamine DPCN or dimercaprol BAL 28 Only DMSA is FDA approved for use in children for treating mercury poisoning However several studies found no clear clinical benefit from DMSA treatment for poisoning due to mercury vapor 59 No chelator for methylmercury or ethylmercury is approved by the FDA DMSA is the most frequently used for severe methylmercury poisoning as it is given orally has fewer side effects and has been found to be superior to BAL DPCN and DMPS 28 a Lipoic acid ALA has been shown to be protective against acute mercury poisoning in several mammalian species when it is given soon after exposure correct dosage is required as inappropriate dosages increase toxicity Although it has been hypothesized that frequent low dosages of ALA may have potential as a mercury chelator studies in rats have been contradictory 60 Glutathione and N acetylcysteine NAC are recommended by some physicians but have been shown to increase mercury concentrations in the kidneys and the brain 60 Chelation therapy can be hazardous if administered incorrectly In August 2005 an incorrect form of EDTA edetate disodium used for chelation therapy resulted in hypocalcemia causing cardiac arrest that killed a five year old autistic boy 61 Other edit Experimental animal and epidemiological study findings have confirmed the interaction between selenium and methylmercury Instead of causing a decline in neurodevelopmental outcomes epidemiological studies have found that improved nutrient i e omega 3 fatty acids selenium iodine vitamin D intakes as a result of ocean fish consumption during pregnancy improves maternal and fetal outcomes 62 For example increased ocean fish consumption during pregnancy was associated with 4 6 point increases in child IQs Prognosis editSome of the toxic effects of mercury are partially or wholly reversible provided specific therapy is able to restore selenium availability to normal before tissue damage from oxidation becomes too extensive 63 Autopsy findings point to a half life of inorganic mercury in human brains of 27 4 years 64 Heavy or prolonged exposure can do irreversible damage in particular in fetuses infants and young children Young s syndrome is believed to be a long term consequence of early childhood mercury poisoning 65 Mercuric chloride may cause cancer as it has caused increases in several types of tumors in rats and mice while methyl mercury has caused kidney tumors in male rats The EPA has classified mercuric chloride and methyl mercury as possible human carcinogens ATSDR EPA Detection in biological fluids edit Mercury may be measured in blood or urine to confirm a diagnosis of poisoning in hospitalized people or to assist in the forensic investigation in a case of fatal over dosage Some analytical techniques are capable of distinguishing organic from inorganic forms of the metal The concentrations in both fluids tend to reach high levels early after exposure to inorganic forms while lower but very persistent levels are observed following exposure to elemental or organic mercury Chelation therapy can cause a transient elevation of urine mercury levels 66 History editThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available October 2022 Neolithic artists using cinnabar show signs of mercury poisoning 67 Several Chinese emperors and other Chinese nobles are known or suspected to have died or been sickened by mercury poisoning after alchemists administered them elixirs to promote health longevity or immortality that contained either elemental mercury or more commonly cinnabar Among the most prominent examples The first emperor of unified China Qin Shi Huang it is reported died in 210 BC of ingesting mercury pills that were intended to give him eternal life 68 Emperor Xuanzong of Tang one of the emperors of the late Tang dynasty of China was prescribed cinnabar that had been treated and subdued by fire to achieve immortality 69 Concerns that the prescription was having ill effects on the emperor s health and sanity were waved off by the imperial alchemists who cited medical texts listing a number of the emperor s conditions including itching formication swelling and muscle weakness today recognized as signs and symptoms of mercury poisoning as evidence that the elixir was effectively treating the emperor s latent ailments 69 Xuanzong became irritable and paranoid and he seems to have ultimately died in 859 from the poisoning 69 In his Natural History Pliny the Elder writes that it is a fact generally admitted that cinnabar is a poison and warns against using it in medicine also noting that workers polishing it tie on their face loose masks of bladder skin to prevent their inhaling the dust in breathing one of the earliest mentions of PPE 70 Carl Scheele a significant 18th century Swedish pioneer of chemical research died from mercury poisoning arising from his work at the relatively early age of 43 71 The phrase mad as a hatter is likely a reference to mercury poisoning among milliners so called mad hatter disease as mercury based compounds were once used in the manufacture of felt hats in the 18th and 19th century The Mad Hatter character of Alice in Wonderland was it is presumed inspired by an eccentric furniture dealer named Theophilus Carter Carter was not a victim of mad hatter disease although Lewis Carroll would have been familiar with the phenomenon of dementia that occurred among hatters 72 73 In 1810 two British ships HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps salvaged a large load of elemental mercury from a wrecked Spanish vessel near Cadiz Spain The bladders containing the mercury soon ruptured The element spread about the ships in liquid and vapor forms The sailors presented with neurologic compromises tremor paralysis and excessive salivation as well as tooth loss skin problems and pulmonary complaints In 1823 William Burnett M D published a report on the effects of mercurial vapor 74 Triumph s surgeon Henry Plowman had concluded that the ailments had arisen from inhaling the mercurialized atmosphere His treatment was to order the lower deck gun ports to be opened when it was safe to do so sleeping on the orlop was forbidden and no men slept in the lower deck if they were at all symptomatic Windsails were set to channel fresh air into the lower decks day and night 75 Historically gold mercury amalgam was widely used in gilding applied to the object and then heated to vaporize the mercury and deposit the gold leading to numerous casualties among the workers It is estimated that during the construction of Saint Isaac s Cathedral alone 60 men died from the gilding of the main dome 76 77 For years including the early part of his presidency Abraham Lincoln took a common medicine of his time called blue mass which contained significant amounts of mercury On September 5 1920 silent movie actress Olive Thomas ingested mercury capsules dissolved in an alcoholic solution at the Hotel Ritz in Paris 78 There is still controversy over whether it was suicide or whether she consumed the external preparation by mistake Her husband Jack Pickford the brother of Mary Pickford had syphilis and the mercury was used as a treatment of the venereal disease at the time She died a few days later at the American Hospital in Neuilly 79 An early scientific study of mercury poisoning was in 1923 1926 by the German inorganic chemist Alfred Stock who himself became poisoned together with his colleagues by breathing mercury vapor that was being released by his laboratory equipment diffusion pumps float valves and manometers all of which contained mercury and also from mercury that had been accidentally spilt and remained in cracks in the linoleum floor covering He published a number of papers on mercury poisoning founded a committee in Berlin to study cases of possible mercury poisoning and introduced the term micromercurialism 80 The term Hunter Russell syndrome derives from a study of mercury poisoning among workers in a seed packaging factory in Norwich England in the late 1930s who breathed methylmercury that was being used as a seed disinfectant and pesticide 81 Outbreaks of methylmercury poisoning occurred in several places in Japan during the 1950s due to industrial discharges of mercury into rivers and coastal waters The best known instances were in Minamata and Niigata In Minamata alone more than 600 people died due to what became known as Minamata disease More than 21 000 people filed claims with the Japanese government of which almost 3000 became certified as having the disease In 22 documented cases pregnant women who consumed contaminated fish showed mild or no symptoms but gave birth to infants with severe developmental disabilities 82 Mercury poisoning of generations of Grassy Narrows and Whitedog native people in Ontario Canada who were exposed to high levels of mercury by consuming mercury contaminated fish when Dryden Chemical Company discharged over 9 000 kilograms 20 000 lb of mercury directly into the Wabigoon English River system and continued with mercury air pollution until 1975 83 84 85 86 Widespread mercury poisoning occurred in rural Iraq in 1971 1972 when grain treated with a methylmercury based fungicide that was intended for planting only was used by the rural population to make bread causing at least 6530 cases of mercury poisoning and at least 459 deaths see Basra poison grain disaster 87 On August 14 1996 Karen Wetterhahn a chemistry professor working at Dartmouth College spilled a small amount of dimethylmercury on her latex glove She began experiencing the symptoms of mercury poisoning five months later and despite aggressive chelation therapy died a few months later from a mercury induced neurodegenerative disease 26 27 In April 2000 Alan Chmurny attempted to kill a former employee Marta Bradley by pouring mercury into the ventilation system of her car 88 89 On March 19 2008 Tony Winnett 55 inhaled mercury vapors while trying to extract gold from computer parts by using liquid mercury to separate gold from the rest of the alloy and died ten days later His Oklahoma residence became so contaminated that it had to be gutted 90 91 In December 2008 actor Jeremy Piven was diagnosed with mercury poisoning possibly resulting from eating sushi twice a day for twenty years or from taking herbal remedies 92 In India a study by Centre for Science and Environment and Indian Institute of Toxicology Research has found that in the country s energy capital Singrauli mercury is slowly entering people s homes food water and even blood 93 The Minamata Convention on Mercury in 2016 announced that the signing of the international treaty designed to protect human health and the environment from anthropogenic releases and emission of mercury and mercury compounds on April 22 2016 Earth Day It was the sixtieth anniversary of the discovery of the disease 94 Infantile acrodynia edit Further information Acrodynia Infantile acrodynia also known as calomel disease erythredemic polyneuropathy and pink disease is a type of mercury poisoning in children characterized by pain and pink discoloration of the hands and feet 95 The word is derived from the Greek where akro means end or extremity and odynh means pain Acrodynia resulted primarily from calomel in teething powders and decreased greatly after calomel was excluded from most teething powders in 1954 96 97 Acrodynia is difficult to diagnose it is most often postulated that the etiology of this syndrome is an idiosyncratic hypersensitivity reaction to mercury because of the lack of correlation with mercury levels many of the symptoms resemble recognized mercury poisoning 98 Medicine edit Further information Mercury element Medicine Mercury was once prescribed as a purgative 99 Many mercury containing compounds were once used in medicines These include calomel mercurous chloride and mercuric chloride Thiomersal edit Further information Thiomersal controversy In 1999 the Centers for Disease Control CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics AAP asked vaccine makers to remove the organomercury compound thiomersal spelled thimerosal in the US from vaccines as quickly as possible and thiomersal has been phased out of US and European vaccines except for some preparations of influenza vaccine 100 The CDC and the AAP followed the precautionary principle which assumes that there is no harm in exercising caution even if it later turns out to be unwarranted but their 1999 action sparked confusion and controversy that thiomersal was a cause of autism 100 Since 2000 the thiomersal in child vaccines has been alleged to contribute to autism and thousands of parents in the United States have pursued legal compensation from a federal fund 101 A 2004 Institute of Medicine IOM committee favored rejecting any causal relationship between thiomersal containing vaccines and autism 102 Autism incidence rates increased steadily even after thiomersal was removed from childhood vaccines 103 Currently there is no accepted scientific evidence that exposure to thiomersal is a factor in causing autism 104 Dental amalgam toxicity edit Further information Dental amalgam toxicity Dental amalgam is a possible cause of low level mercury poisoning due to its use in dental fillings Discussion on the topic includes debates on whether amalgam should be used with critics arguing that its toxic effects make it unsafe Cosmetics edit Some skin whitening products contain the toxic mercury II chloride as the active ingredient When applied the chemical readily absorbs through the skin into the bloodstream 105 The use of mercury in cosmetics is illegal in the United States However cosmetics containing mercury are often illegally imported Following a certified case of mercury poisoning resulting from the use of an imported skin whitening product the United States Food and Drug Administration warned against the use of such products 106 107 Symptoms of mercury poisoning have resulted from the use of various mercury containing cosmetic products 31 108 109 The use of skin whitening products is especially popular amongst Asian women 110 In Hong Kong in 2002 two products were discovered to contain between 9 000 and 60 000 times the recommended dose 111 Fluorescent lamps edit Fluorescent lamps contain mercury which is released when bulbs break Mercury in bulbs is typically present as either elemental mercury liquid vapor or both since the liquid evaporates at ambient temperature 112 When broken indoors bulbs may emit sufficient mercury vapor to present health concerns and the U S Environmental Protection Agency recommends evacuating and airing out a room for at least 15 minutes after breaking a fluorescent light bulb 113 Breakage of multiple bulbs presents a greater concern A 1987 report described a 23 month old toddler who had anorexia weight loss irritability profuse sweating and peeling and redness of fingers and toes This case of acrodynia was traced to exposure of mercury from a carton of 8 foot fluorescent light bulbs that had broken in a potting shed adjacent to the main nursery The glass was cleaned up and discarded but the child often used the area to play in 114 Assassination attempts edit Mercury has allegedly been used at various times to assassinate people In 2008 Russian lawyer Karinna Moskalenko claimed to have been poisoned by mercury left in her car 115 while in 2010 journalists Viktor Kalashnikov and Marina Kalashnikova accused Russia s FSB of trying to poison them 116 See also editDiagnosis Mercury Money Politics and Poison Environmental impact of the coal industry Erethism Dental amalgam controversy Got Mercury a public awareness campaign Lead poisoning Mercury vacuum Mercury containing and Rechargeable Battery Management Act Methylmercury Minamata disease Niigata Minamata disease Ontario Minamata disease Mercury contamination in Grassy Narrows Ontario Canada Mercury cycleReferences edit a b c Mercury NIEHS Archived from the original on 19 November 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2016 a b c d e Bose O Reilly S McCarty KM Steckling N Lettmeier B September 2010 Mercury exposure and children s health Current Problems in Pediatric and Adolescent Health Care 40 8 186 215 doi 10 1016 j cppeds 2010 07 002 PMC 3096006 PMID 20816346 a b c d e f g h i Bernhoft RA 2012 Mercury toxicity and treatment a review of the literature Journal of Environmental and Public Health 2012 460508 doi 10 1155 2012 460508 PMC 3253456 PMID 22235210 a b c d e Mercury and health WHO January 2016 Archived from the original on 20 November 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2016 a b c Kosnett MJ December 2013 The role of chelation in the treatment of arsenic and mercury poisoning Journal of Medical Toxicology 9 4 347 54 doi 10 1007 s13181 013 0344 5 PMC 3846971 PMID 24178900 Hong YS Kim YM Lee KE November 2012 Methylmercury exposure and health effects Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health Yebang Uihakhoe Chi 45 6 353 63 doi 10 3961 jpmph 2012 45 6 353 PMC 3514465 PMID 23230465 Environment U N 2019 03 04 Global Mercury Assessment 2018 UNEP UN Environment Programme Retrieved 2022 01 12 Bernhoft Robin A 2012 Mercury toxicity and treatment a review of the literature Journal of Environmental and Public Health 2012 460508 doi 10 1155 2012 460508 ISSN 1687 9813 PMC 3253456 PMID 22235210 Spiller Henry A May 2018 Rethinking mercury the role of selenium in the pathophysiology of mercury toxicity Clinical Toxicology 56 5 313 326 doi 10 1080 15563650 2017 1400555 ISSN 1556 9519 PMID 29124976 S2CID 4295652 Johnson Arbor Kelly Tefera Eshetu Farrell John June 2021 Characteristics and treatment of elemental mercury intoxication A case series Health Science Reports 4 2 e293 doi 10 1002 hsr2 293 ISSN 2398 8835 PMC 8177896 PMID 34136656 Horowitz Y Greenberg D Ling G Lifshitz M June 2002 Acrodynia a case report of two siblings Archives of Disease in Childhood 86 6 453 doi 10 1136 adc 86 6 453 PMC 1762992 PMID 12023189 United States Environmental Protection Agency December 1997 Mercury Study Report to Congress PDF Vol 3 Washington D C United States Environmental Protection Agency Archived PDF from the original on 2011 02 03 ATSDR Mercury ToxFAQ April 1999 ToxFAQs Mercury PDF Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Retrieved 2007 07 25 Dufault R LeBlanc B Schnoll R Cornett C Schweitzer L Wallinga D et al January 2009 Mercury from chlor alkali plants measured concentrations in food product sugar Environmental Health 8 1 2 doi 10 1186 1476 069X 8 2 PMC 2637263 PMID 19171026 Mercury in High Fructose Corn Syrup Levy M August 1995 Dental amalgam toxicological evaluation and health risk assessment Journal 61 8 667 8 671 4 PMID 7553398 Goldman LR Shannon MW July 2001 Technical report mercury in the environment implications for pediatricians Pediatrics 108 1 197 205 doi 10 1542 peds 108 1 197 PMID 11433078 Mercury danger in dolphin meat 2009 Archived 2012 06 30 at archive today Mercury 2013 07 08 Archived from the original on 2015 04 08 Retrieved 2015 04 08 Ballabio C Jiskra M Osterwalder S Borrelli P Montanarella L Panagos P May 2021 A spatial assessment of mercury content in the European Union topsoil The Science of the Total Environment 769 144755 Bibcode 2021ScTEn 769n4755B doi 10 1016 j scitotenv 2020 144755 PMC 8024745 PMID 33736262 Pacyna EG Pacyna JM Steenhuisen F Wilson S 2006 Global anthropogenic mercury emission inventory for 2000 Atmos Environ 40 22 4048 63 Bibcode 2006AtmEn 40 4048P doi 10 1016 j atmosenv 2006 03 041 How mercury poisons gold miners and enters the food chain Archived 2013 09 23 at the Wayback Machine BBC News United States Environmental Protection Agency December 1997 Mercury Study Report to Congress PDF Vol 4 Washington D C United States Environmental Protection Agency Archived PDF from the original on 2011 02 03 Lynch E Braithwaite R July 2005 A review of the clinical and toxicological aspects of traditional herbal medicines adulterated with heavy metals Expert Opinion on Drug Safety 4 4 769 78 doi 10 1517 14740338 4 4 769 PMID 16011453 S2CID 19160044 Ching FM 2007 Chinese Herbal Drug Research Trends Nova Publishers ISBN 9781600219283 a b The Karen Wetterhahn story Archived 2012 05 30 at the Wayback Machine University of Bristol web page documenting her death retrieved December 9 2006 a b OSHA update following Karen Wetterhahn s death Archived 2015 07 11 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Clifton JC April 2007 Mercury exposure and public health Pediatric Clinics of North America 54 2 237 69 viii doi 10 1016 j pcl 2007 02 005 PMID 17448359 What you need to know about mercury in fish and shellfish Advice for women who might become pregnant women who are pregnant nursing mothers young children Archived 2013 05 17 at the Wayback Machine U S FDA and U S EPA Advisory EPA 823 F 04 009 March 2004 Mozaffarian D Rimm EB October 2006 Fish intake contaminants and human health evaluating the risks and the benefits JAMA 296 15 1885 99 doi 10 1001 jama 296 15 1885 PMID 17047219 a b c Clarkson TW Magos L September 2006 The toxicology of mercury and its chemical compounds Critical Reviews in Toxicology 36 8 609 662 doi 10 1080 10408440600845619 PMID 16973445 S2CID 37652857 Bayer SA Altman J Russo RJ Zhang X 1993 Timetables of neurogenesis in the human brain based on experimentally determined patterns in the rat Neurotoxicology 14 1 83 144 PMID 8361683 Rice D Barone S June 2000 Critical periods of vulnerability for the developing nervous system evidence from humans and animal models Environmental Health Perspectives 108 Suppl 3 3 511 33 doi 10 2307 3454543 JSTOR 3454543 PMC 1637807 PMID 10852851 Newland MC Reed MN Rasmussen E May 2015 A hypothesis about how early developmental methylmercury exposure disrupts behavior in adulthood Behavioural Processes 114 41 51 doi 10 1016 j beproc 2015 03 007 PMC 4407818 PMID 25795099 Langford N Ferner R October 1999 Toxicity of mercury Journal of Human Hypertension 13 10 651 6 doi 10 1038 sj jhh 1000896 PMID 10516733 S2CID 37322483 Emsley John The Elements of Murder Oxford Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 0 19 280599 1 Mercuric Cyanide 1987 Mercuric Cyanide Archived from the original on 2011 05 11 Retrieved 2011 02 22 accessed April 2 2009 a b ATSDR 1999 Toxicological Profile for Mercury Atlanta GA Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2011 02 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Hursh JB Clarkson TW Miles EF Goldsmith LA 1989 Percutaneous absorption of mercury vapor by man Archives of Environmental Health 44 2 120 7 doi 10 1080 00039896 1989 9934385 PMID 2494955 Cherian MG Hursh JB Clarkson TW Allen J 1978 Radioactive mercury distribution in biological fluids and excretion in human subjects after inhalation of mercury vapor Archives of Environmental Health 33 3 109 14 doi 10 1080 00039896 1978 10667318 PMID 686833 Ngim CH Foo SC Boey KW Jeyaratnam J November 1992 Chronic neurobehavioural effects of elemental mercury in dentists British Journal of Industrial Medicine 49 11 782 90 doi 10 1136 oem 49 11 782 PMC 1039326 PMID 1463679 Liang YX Sun RK Sun Y Chen ZQ Li LH February 1993 Psychological effects of low exposure to mercury vapor application of a computer administered neurobehavioral evaluation system Environmental Research 60 2 320 7 Bibcode 1993ER 60 320L doi 10 1006 enrs 1993 1040 PMID 8472661 Carvalho CM Chew EH Hashemy SI Lu J Holmgren A May 2008 Inhibition of the human thioredoxin system A molecular mechanism of mercury toxicity The Journal of Biological Chemistry 283 18 11913 23 doi 10 1074 jbc m710133200 PMID 18321861 S2CID 1318126 Linster CL Van Schaftingen E January 2007 Vitamin C Biosynthesis recycling and degradation in mammals The FEBS Journal 274 1 1 22 doi 10 1111 j 1742 4658 2006 05607 x PMID 17222174 S2CID 21345196 Ralston NV Raymond LJ November 2010 Dietary selenium s protective effects against methylmercury toxicity Toxicology 278 1 112 23 doi 10 1016 j tox 2010 06 004 PMID 20561558 da Silva Diane Cleydes Baia Bittencourt Leonardo Oliveira Baia da Silva Daiane Claydes Chemelo Victoria Santos Eiro Quirino Luciana Nascimento Priscila Cunha Silva Marcia Cristina Freitas Freire Marco Aurelio M Gomes Leal Walace Crespo Lopez Maria Elena Lima Rafael Rodrigues 2022 03 29 Methylmercury Causes Neurodegeneration and Downregulation of Myelin Basic Protein in the Spinal Cord of Offspring Rats after Maternal Exposure International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23 7 3777 doi 10 3390 ijms23073777 ISSN 1422 0067 PMC 8998727 PMID 35409136 el Fawal HA Gong Z Little AR Evans HL 1996 Exposure to methyl mercury results in serum autoantibodies to neurotypic and gliotypic proteins Neurotoxicology 17 1 267 76 PMID 8784838 a b Ibrahim D Froberg B Wolf A Rusyniak DE March 2006 Heavy metal poisoning clinical presentations and pathophysiology Clinics in Laboratory Medicine 26 1 67 97 viii doi 10 1016 j cll 2006 02 003 PMID 16567226 Export ban of mercury and mercury compounds from the EU by 2011 Press release European Parliament 2008 05 21 Archived from the original on 2008 09 25 Retrieved 2008 06 10 Mercury Industry Environment European Commission EU states clash over use of toxic mercury in light bulbs TheGuardian com 7 February 2020 ATSDR Mercury Regulations and Advisories Archived 2011 06 06 at the Wayback Machine FDA EPA 2004 Advice on What You Need to Know About Mercury in Fish and Shellfish Archived 2009 03 08 at the Wayback Machine EPA Fish Kids Flash based movie Archived 2008 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Cleaning Up Spilled Mercury Archived 2016 04 03 at the Wayback Machine What to Do if a Mercury Thermometer Breaks US Environmental Protection Agency 2015 08 18 Retrieved 2018 03 22 Sur l emploi de l iodure de potassium pour combattre les affections saturnines et mercurielles in Annales de chimie et de physique t 26 3e serie 1849 On the Employment of Iodide of Potassium as a Remedy for the Affections Caused by Lead and Mercury in Br Foreign Med Chir Rev 1853 Jan 11 21 201 224 Risher JF Amler SN August 2005 Mercury exposure evaluation and intervention the inappropriate use of chelating agents in the diagnosis and treatment of putative mercury poisoning Neurotoxicology 26 4 691 9 doi 10 1016 j neuro 2005 05 004 PMID 16009427 a b Rooney JP May 2007 The role of thiols dithiols nutritional factors and interacting ligands in the toxicology of mercury Toxicology 234 3 145 56 doi 10 1016 j tox 2007 02 016 PMID 17408840 Hazards of chelation therapy Brown MJ Willis T Omalu B Leiker R August 2006 Deaths resulting from hypocalcemia after administration of edetate disodium 2003 2005 Pediatrics 118 2 e534 6 doi 10 1542 peds 2006 0858 PMID 16882789 S2CID 28656831 Archived from the original on 2009 07 27 Baxter AJ Krenzelok EP December 2008 Pediatric fatality secondary to EDTA chelation Clinical Toxicology 46 10 1083 4 doi 10 1080 15563650701261488 PMID 18949650 S2CID 24576683 Spiller HA May 2018 Rethinking mercury the role of selenium in the pathophysiology of mercury toxicity Clinical Toxicology 56 5 313 326 doi 10 1080 15563650 2017 1400555 PMC 4856720 PMID 29124976 Ralston NV Kaneko JJ Raymond LJ September 2019 Selenium health benefit values provide a reliable index of seafood benefits vs risks Journal of Trace Elements in Medicine and Biology 55 5 50 57 doi 10 1016 j jtemb 2019 05 009 PMID 31345365 S2CID 190878923 Rooney JP February 2014 The retention time of inorganic mercury in the brain a systematic review of the evidence Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 274 3 425 35 doi 10 1016 j taap 2013 12 011 hdl 2262 68176 PMID 24368178 Hendry WF A Hern RP Cole PJ 1993 Was Young s syndrome caused by exposure to mercury in childhood BMJ 307 6919 1579 82 doi 10 1136 bmj 307 6919 1579 PMC 1697782 PMID 8292944 R Baselt Disposition of Toxic Drugs and Chemicals in Man 8th edition Biomedical Publications Foster City CA 2008 pp 923 927 Kindy David 19 November 2021 Earliest Evidence of Mercury Poisoning in Humans Found in 5 000 Year Old Bones Smithsonian Retrieved 3 December 2021 Zhao HL Zhu X Sui Y August 2006 The short lived Chinese emperors Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 54 8 1295 6 doi 10 1111 j 1532 5415 2006 00821 x PMID 16914004 S2CID 31630319 a b c Chris Stewart 22 January 2017 116 Tang 28 I Xuanzong The History of China Podcast Agora Podcast Network Event occurs at 29 30 Archived from the original on 6 March 2017 Retrieved 24 January 2017 Pliny the Elder s Contribution to Toxicology amp Occupational Health amp Safety Online Safety Trainer 2023 03 29 Retrieved 2024 01 03 Castle Frederick A Rice Charles eds 1886 Carl Wilhelm Scheele American Druggist New York 15 August 157 158 Retrieved 15 August 2023 Waldron HA 1983 Did the Mad Hatter have mercury poisoning British Medical Journal 287 6409 1961 doi 10 1136 bmj 287 6409 1961 PMC 1550196 PMID 6418283 Kitzmiller KJ The Not So Mad Hatter Occupational Hazards of Mercury Archived from the original on 2013 12 02 An Account of the Effect of Mercurial Vapors on the Crew of His Majesty s Ship Triumph in the year 1810 By Wm Burnett M D one of the Medical Commissioners of the Navy formerly Physician and Inspector of Hospitals to the Mediterranean Fleet Michael J Doherty MD The Quicksilver Prize Mercury vapor poisoning aboard HMS Triumph and HMS Phipps 2003 An article about the cathedral Archived from the original on 2011 08 28 An article about gilding Archived from the original on 2013 10 23 Bichloride of Mercury Killed Olive Thomas The Toronto World September 15 1920 p 6 Retrieved August 27 2018 Foster Charles 2000 Stardust and Shadows Canadians in Early Hollywood page 257 Toronto Canada Dundurn Press 2000 ISBN 978 1550023480 Stock A 1926 Die Gefaehrlichkeit des Quecksilberdampfes Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Chemie 39 15 461 466 Bibcode 1926AngCh 39 461S doi 10 1002 ange 19260391502 Hunter D Bomford RR Russell DS 1940 Poisoning by methylmercury compounds Quarterly Journal of Medicine 9 193 213 Davidson PW Myers GJ Weiss B April 2004 Mercury exposure and child development outcomes Pediatrics 113 4 Suppl 1023 9 doi 10 1542 peds 113 S3 1023 PMID 15060195 S2CID 6597018 Archived from the original on 2012 12 16 McDonald A Indigenous peoples vulnerabilities exposed Lessons learned from Canada s Minamata incident An Environmental analysis based on the case study of methyl mercury pollution in northwestern Ontario Canada JACS Conference 2007 PDF Japanese Association for Canadian Studies Archived from the original PDF on October 14 2007 Retrieved December 14 2007 D ltri PA D ltr FM January 1 1978 Mercury contamination A human tragedy Environmental Management 2 1 3 16 Bibcode 1978EnMan 2 3D doi 10 1007 BF01866442 ISSN 1432 1009 S2CID 153666705 Retrieved March 6 2021 Bruser D Poisson J November 11 2017 Ontario knew about Grassy Narrows mercury site for decades but kept it secret The Toronto Star ISSN 0319 0781 Retrieved 2017 12 16 Porter J 2016 Children of the poisoned river CBC News Retrieved March 3 2021 Engler R April 27 1985 Technology out of Control The Nation 240 Archived from the original on March 17 2011 Vargas JA 2007 01 26 Mad Scientist On Court TV Fatal Chemistry The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2012 11 08 Retrieved 2007 01 28 Perl Peter 2002 02 03 Obsession The Washington Post Retrieved 2021 08 28 Swearengin M 2008 04 01 Man dies from mercury poisoning after trying to extract gold Durant Daily Democrat Colbert man dies from mercury poisoning Tulsa World Associated Press 2008 04 01 Retrieved 2019 05 18 Tiffany McGee 2009 01 15 Jeremy Piven Explains His Mystery Ailment People Archived from the original on 2009 01 21 Retrieved 2009 01 15 Death in India lurks in poisoned water on the rim of coal fields 5 December 2014 Archived from the original on 2017 10 15 Retrieved 2017 10 15 Coulter MA January 20 2017 Minamata Convention on Mercury Cambridge Cambridge University Press 55 3 582 616 doi 10 5305 intelegamate 55 3 0582 S2CID 132189787 James WD Berger TG Elston DM 2006 Andrews diseases of the skin clinical dermatology 10th ed Saunders p 134 ISBN 978 0 7216 2921 6 Bjorklund G 1995 Mercury and Acrodynia PDF Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine 10 3 amp 4 145 146 Archived PDF from the original on 2011 07 21 Dally A August 1997 The rise and fall of pink disease Social History of Medicine 10 2 291 304 doi 10 1093 shm 10 2 291 PMID 11619497 Ford M Delaney KA Ling L Erickson T 2000 Clinical Toxicology 1st ed Saunders ISBN 978 0 7216 5485 0 Bartholow Roberts 1879 A practical treatise on materia medica and therapeutics Appleton p 200 a b Offit PA September 2007 Thimerosal and vaccines a cautionary tale The New England Journal of Medicine 357 13 1278 79 doi 10 1056 NEJMp078187 PMID 17898096 Sugarman SD September 2007 Cases in vaccine court legal battles over vaccines and autism The New England Journal of Medicine 357 13 1275 1277 doi 10 1056 NEJMp078168 PMID 17898095 Immunization Safety Review Committee 2004 Immunization Safety Review Vaccines and Autism The National Academies Press doi 10 17226 10997 ISBN 978 0 309 09237 1 PMID 20669467 Archived from the original on 2012 07 04 Gerber JS Offit PA February 2009 Vaccines and autism a tale of shifting hypotheses Clinical Infectious Diseases 48 4 456 461 doi 10 1086 596476 PMC 2908388 PMID 19128068 Doja A Roberts W November 2006 Immunizations and autism a review of the literature The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences 33 4 341 346 doi 10 1017 s031716710000528x PMID 17168158 Counter SA December 16 2003 Whitening skin can be deadly The Boston Globe Archived from the original on September 1 2009 FDA Proposes Hydroquinone Ban Archived from the original on 2007 07 03 FDA bans hydroquinone in skin whitening products NYC Health Dept Warns Against Use of Skin lightening Creams Containing Mercury or Similar Products Which Do Not List Ingredients January 27 2005 Archived from the original on May 24 2007 Counter SA Buchanan LH Mercury exposure in children a review Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 198 2 doi 10 1016 j taap 2003 11 032 Mahaffey KR 2005 Exposure to Mercury in the Americas Dynamics of Mercury Pollution on Regional and Global Scales Springer pp 345 384 doi 10 1007 0 387 24494 8 15 ISBN 978 0 387 24493 8 In a survey 28 of Koreans and 50 of Philippians say that they use skin whitening products Skin lightening in Asia A bright future Archived from the original on 2007 05 25 Bray M 2002 05 15 SKIN DEEP Dying to be white CNN Archived from the original on 2010 04 08 Retrieved 2010 05 12 Aucott M McLinden M Winka M February 2003 Release of mercury from broken fluorescent bulbs Journal of the Air amp Waste Management Association 53 2 143 51 doi 10 1080 10473289 2003 10466132 PMID 12617289 S2CID 9263443 Spills disposal and site cleanup U S Environmental Protection Agency 2009 07 13 Archived from the original on 2009 07 01 Retrieved 2009 06 30 Tunnessen WW McMahon KJ Baser M May 1987 Acrodynia exposure to mercury from fluorescent light bulbs Pediatrics 79 5 786 789 doi 10 1542 peds 79 5 786 PMID 3575038 S2CID 36523101 Gutterman Steve 15 October 2008 Russian lawyer suspects mercury poisoning USA Today Associated Press Archived from the original on 2011 12 17 Allen Nick 27 December 2010 German inquiry into poisoning of Russian dissidents The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2010 12 29 External links editHazardous Substances Mercury at Curlie Toxic Substances Mercury at Curlie Portal nbsp Environment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mercury poisoning amp oldid 1195839183, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.