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Toxicology: How Mercury
Harms Humans
Elemental (metallic) mercury and its compounds are toxic and
exposure to excessive levels can permanently damage or
fatally injure the brain and kidneys. Elemental mercury can
also be absorbed through the skin and cause allergic
reactions. Ingestion of inorganic mercury compounds can
cause severe renal and gastrointestinal toxicity. Organic
compounds of mercury such as methyl mercury are considered
the most toxic forms of the element. Exposures to very small
amounts of these compounds can result in devastating
neurological damage and death.
For fetuses, infants and children, the primary health
effects of mercury are on neurological development. Even low
levels of mercury exposure such as result from mother's
consumption methylmercury in dietary sources can adversely
affect the brain and nervous system. Impacts on memory,
attention, language and other skills have been found in
children exposed to moderate levels in the womb.
How do people get exposed to mercury?
Air borne mercury is highly toxic when inhaled. How does it
get in the air?
Metallic mercury slowly evaporates when exposed to the air.
The air in a room can reach contamination levels just from
the mercury in a broken thermometer
Mercury may be released into the air when coal, oil, or wood
are burned as fuel or when mercury-containing wastes are
incinerated. The resulting mercury concentrations in outdoor
air are usually low and of little direct concern. However,
mercury in the air can fall to the ground with rain and
snow, landing on soil or in bodies of water, causing
contamination. Lakes and rivers are also contaminated when
there is a direct discharge of mercury-laden industrial or
municipal waste into the water.
When mercury enters bodies of water, biological processes
transform it to methylmercury, a highly toxic and
bioaccumulative form. Fish can absorb methylmercury from
their food and directly from water as it passes over their
gills.
The cycle of mercury in nature is complex. This illustration
summarizes how methylmercury accumulates at the higher
levels of the food chain and becomes concentrated in fish
and animals that eat fish.
Methylmercury in the water and sediment is taken up by tiny
animals and plants known as plankton.
Minnows and juvenile fish eat large quantities of plankton
over time.
Larger predatory fish consume many smaller fish,
accumulating methylmercury in their tissues. The older and
larger the fish, the greater the potential for high mercury
levels in their bodies.
Fish are caught and eaten by humans and animals, causing
methylmercury to accumulate in human tissues.
Most people are exposed to mercury by eating fish containing
mercury. Since mercury is tightly bound to proteins in all
fish tissue, including muscle, there is no method of cooking
or cleaning them that will reduce the amount of mercury in a
meal.
From the mid-1950s to the 1970s, several mass poisonings
took place in Japan and in Canada involving methylmercury
from consumption of fish from contaminated waters. Although
instances of poisoning from fish consumption in the U.S.
have not been reported, the possibility of such poisoning
has been a subject of concern. In the U.S., the number of
states that have issued health advisories limiting
consumption of fish has risen steadily from 27 states in
1993 to 41 states in 1999. A total of 2,073 advisories were
issued.http://www.epa.gov/waterscience/fish/
Currently, concern is focused on the health impacts of
chronic exposures to low levels of mercury from dietary
sources. Preliminary estimates of mercury levels in hair and
blood samples from the 1999 National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey suggest that approximately 10% of women
have mercury levels within one tenth of potentially
hazardous levels indicating a narrow margin of safety for
some women. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5008a2.htm.
The National Research Council (NRC) issued a report
estimating that as many as 60,000 newborns a year in the
U.S. are now at risk for adverse neurodevelopmental effects
from dietary mercury http://www.nap.edu/books/0309071402/html/.
These studies strongly support efforts to reduce
methylmercury exposure.
Occupational Health Hazards in Biomedical Facilities
The most common potential mode of occupational exposure to
mercury in biomedical facilities is probably via inhalation
of vapors. If not cleaned up properly, spills of even small
amounts of elemental mercury, such as may result from
breakage of thermometers, can contaminate indoor air above
recommended limits and lead to serious health consequences.
Some organic mercury compounds such as methylmercury, find
limited use in biomedical research procedures such as gel
electrophoresis and as a reference in nuclear magnetic
spectroscopy. At least two fatal exposures have occurred in
laboratories. The most recently reported incident involved a
chemistry professor with an interest in the toxicology of
heavy metals. During an experiment performed in a fume hood,
she accidentally spilled several drops of methylmercury onto
a gloved hand. The spill was considered inconsequential and
cleaned up without special measures. Approximately two
months later, the professor began to develop symptoms of
neurotoxicity. She died despite receiving aggressive
chelation therapy and medical support.