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Mercury toxicity
From WikEM
(Redirected from Mercury)
Contents
Background
- Atomic symbol of Hg from latin name hydrargyros which means silver water
Historical Exposures
- Hat felters (Elemental)
- "Mad as a hatter"
- Anti-syphilitic agents (Inorganic)
- "A night in the arms of venus lead to a lifetime on mercury"
- Calomel (Inorganic)
- Mercurous Chloride sold as a teething powder
- Causes "pink disease"
- pain and erythema of the palms and soles, irritability, insomnia, anorexia, diaphoresis, photophobia, and skin rash
- Minamata Bay, Japan (Organic)
- Massive exposure to methylmercury from contaminated seafood secondary to industrial dumping of mercury containing compounds
- Iraq 1971 (Organic)
- 95,000 tons of methylmercury coated grain sold for human consumption
- Miners and smelters (Elemental)
- Mostly secondary to exposure to Cinnabar (HgS)
- Dental workers through amalgams (Elemental)
- Clinical effects secondary to exposure to mercury through amalgams is controversial
Common Exposures
- Industrial
- Batteries, fungicide
- Seafood consumption
- Mostly methylmercury
Exists as three major forms
- All disrupt sulfhydryl ezymes leading to impaired cellular function
Elemental
- Liquid metal at room temperature (Think of the Terminator recongealing)
- 14x more dense than water
- Volatile and lipid soluble, therefore rapidly absorbed through lungs (approximately 70-80%)
- Oxidized rapidly to inorganic form
- Poorly absorbed from GI tract
- Therefor most ingestions are non-toxic
Organic
- Exists in three major forms:
- Long chain
- Short chain
- Aryl
- Long chain and Aryl forms are rapidly converted to inorganic forms
- Short chain forms are highly lipophilic and cross the blood-brain barrier and placenta
- Metabolized in the liver to N-acetyl-homocysteine-methylmercury which undergoes enterohepatic recirculation
Inorganic
- Exists as monovalent and divalent
- Corrosive
- Chronic exposures lead to accumulation in brain and CNS
- Found in many batteries, little risk of toxicity from the mercury components s/p ingestion
- Other dangers exist though!!!
- The California Department of Public Health issued a health alert on May, 2014 noting mercury poisoning linked to use of skin-lightening or acne Creams from Mexico[1]
Clinical Features
- Clinical presentation highly dependent on form, concentration and duration of exposure
- Inhalation of elemental mercury and ingestion of inorganic can cause acute or subacute toxicity
- Organic mercury more likely causes chronic toxicity
Elemental Mercury
Acute Exposure
- Metal fume fever
- Usually self limited course of fever, chills, shortness of breath, metallic taste in throat, lethargy, confusion, vomiting, renal tubular necrosis
- Rarely may progress to respiratory compromise and death
- Usually self limited course of fever, chills, shortness of breath, metallic taste in throat, lethargy, confusion, vomiting, renal tubular necrosis
- Worse presentation in children
- May develop pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum and interstitial emphysema
- Small airway obstruction secondary to desquamation
Chronic Exposure
- Classic Triad:
- Tremor
- Gingivitis/stomatitis
- Hyperexcitable state/emotional lability
- Other findings
- Headache, visual disturbances, peripheral neuropathy, ataxia
Inorganic Mercury
Acute Exposure
- Primarily toxic through oral route
- Causes caustic burns
- Severity dependent on type [Hg(2)Cl vs Hg(1)Cl] and concentration of mercurial salts
- Mercuric forms [Hg(2)] more toxic
- Other symptoms include pain, nausea, hematemesis, hypovolemia, acute tubular necrosis
- Sequelae include renal failure
- Severity dependent on type [Hg(2)Cl vs Hg(1)Cl] and concentration of mercurial salts
Chronic Exposure
- Chronic exposures usually secondary to inhalation exposure
- Symptoms include renal failure, dementia, acrodynia
- Acrodynia (AKA pink disease) = painful erythema and edema of hands and feet, rash, tachycardia, hypertension and irritability.
- Neuropsychiatric disturbances
Organic Mercury
- Acute and chronic exposures present similarly
- Acute presentations usually show signs days to weeks after exposure
- Neuro symptoms predominate
- Tremor, ataxia, paresthesias, memory difficulties, visual disturbances, hearing loss
- May also cause thrombocytopenia and agranulocytosis
- Highly fetotoxic
- Easily crosses placenta
- May lead to severe mental retardation (like those with Minamata disease), developmental delay, ataxia and seizures in offspring
- Controversy exists over exposure from regular diet
- Albacore tuna may contain up to 0.34ppm of organic mercury
- Please see Faroe Island and Seychelles studies
- Thimerosal (mercury containing preservative found in many vaccines) has NOT been linked to developmental delays or autism
Differential Diagnosis
Heavy metal toxicity
- Aluminum toxicity
- Antimony toxicity
- Arsenic toxicity
- Barium toxicity
- Bismuth toxicity
- Cadmium toxicity
- Chromium toxicity
- Cobalt toxicity
- Copper toxicity
- Gold toxicity
- Iron toxicity
- Lead toxicity
- Lithium toxicity
- Manganese toxicity
- Mercury toxicity
- Nickel toxicity
- Phosphorous toxicity
- Platinum toxicity
- Selenium toxicity
- Silver toxicity
- Thallium toxicity
- Tin toxicity
- Zinc toxicity
Evaluation
Work-Up
- Urine and blood Hg levels
- CBC
- Chem 7
- Type and screen
- Radiographs
Evaluation
- Urine Hg levels (>25μg/L is elevated) for elemental and organic mercury
- Levels >300μg/L usually symptomatic
- Organic mercury poorly excreted
- Blood levels for organic mercury
- Hair analysis is not sufficient
Management
- ABC's
- Decontaminate
Inhalation injuries
- Oxygen
- May require intubation
Caustic injuries
- May consider milk or egg whites
- Thought to bind Hg
- WBI
Chelation therapy
- Penicillamine 250mg PO QID x 1-2wks
- Avoid in renal failure
- Dimercaprol (BAL) 2.5-5mg IM Q6-12hr
- DMSA 10mg/kg TID x 5days then 10mg/kg BID x 14days
Disposition
See Also
External Links
- The biological monitoring of mercury in the Seychelles study: Methylmercury and human health http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8714867
- Cognitive performance of children prenatally exposed to "safe" level of methylmercury http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9600810
References
- Haddad and Winchester's Clinical Management of Poisoning and Overdose
- Goldfrank's Toxicology
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury(I)_chloride
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minamata_disease
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1971_Iraq_poison_grain_disaster