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Journal Article

Citation

Noble MJ, Decker SL, Zane Horowitz B. Clin. Toxicol. (Phila) 2016; 54(9): 847-851.

Affiliation

a Department of Emergency Medicine , Oregon-Alaska Poison Center, Oregon Health and Science University , Portland , OR , USA ;

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15563650.2016.1199029

PMID

27338817

Abstract

CONTEXT: Mercury exposure has been described among small-scale gold mining communities in developing countries, but reports of inhalational mercury toxicity among home gold extractors in the US remain uncommon.

OBJECTIVE: We sought to identify inhalational mercury exposures and toxicity among artisanal gold extractors.

METHODS: This is an observational case series of a single Poison Center database from 2002-2015. We review all cases of "mercury" or "mercury inhalation" exposures, with detailed description of a recent representative case.

RESULTS: Nine cases were reported, with patients' ages ranging 32-81 years. Eight (89%) patients were male. Seven of eight (88%) patients with acute exposures reported pulmonary symptoms consistent with mercury vapor inhalation such as dyspnea and cough; two (29%) patients had severe toxicity requiring intubation. Four of six (67%) patients had markedly elevated whole blood mercury concentrations up to 346 mcg/L; each received a different chelation regimen. Four (44%) patients used methamphetamines at the time of their exposure. The case report describes a patient with elevated mercury concentrations who required intubation for hypoxic respiratory failure. He received chelation therapy based on chelator availability, with decreasing 24-hour urine mercury concentrations. The house where he was exposed remains uninhabitable from elevated ambient mercury vapor concentrations.

CONCLUSION: Artisanal gold extraction may be associated with inhalational mercury toxicity, including elevated blood mercury concentrations and acute hypoxic lung injury requiring intubation.


Language: en

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