Toxin
Mercury Poisoning
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Mercury Poisoning
, Mercury Toxicity, Mercury Content in Fish, Mercury
Background
Mercury is the only metal liquid at room
Temperature
Mined in Spain as Cinnabar
Contaminates water and air via disposal of items
Batteries
Polyvinyl chloride
Latex
paint
Pathophysiology
Sources of exposure
Mercury-containing device spill
Disk battery ingestion
Laxative
abuse
Repeated thimerosal exposure
Contaminated seafood exposure (see below)
Exposure to paint containing Mercury
Effects vary by form of Mercury
Elemental Mercury
Exposure via inhalation, aspiration, or injection
Causes lung toxicity and
ARDS
Can also cause neruologic and renal sequelae
Inorganic Mercury salts
Exposure via ingestion
Results in gastrointestinal and nephrotoxicity
Organic Mercury compounds
Exposure via ingestion or transdermal
Results in delayed neurotoxicity
Mechanisms of injury
Mercury binds sulfhydryl groups on
Protein
s
Results in
Protein
misfolding and dysfunction
Nephrotoxicity
Local immune reaction and direct damage
Skin Injury
Local immune reaction
Cardiovascular changes (
Hypertension
and
Tachycardia
)
Catechol-O-methyltransferase
Neurotoxicity (cognitive decline,
Ataxia
,
Tremor
)
Injury to
Cerebellum
, postcentral gyri, calcarine
Symptoms and signs
Inhalation Injury
(Mercury vapor)
Acute exposure
Shortness of Breath
Fever
and chills
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
(
ARDS
)
Bloody
Diarrhea
Renal tubular necrosis
Subacute or chronic exposure
Metal fume fever
Neuropsychiatric changes
Nephrotoxicity
Skin changes
Aspiration Injury (liquid Mercury)
Tracheobronchial
Hemorrhage
Aspiration Pneumonitis
Ingestion Injury (inorganic Mercury salts)
Acute ingestion
Corrosive
Gastroenteritis
Gastrointestinal Bleeding
Mucous membrane grayish discoloration
Hypovolemic Shock
(secondary to
Fluid Shifts
)
Acute Tubular Necrosis
Other gastrointestinal symptoms as below
Chronic or subacute exposure
Neurotoxicity
Neurasthenia, erethism
Nephrotoxicity
Proteinuria
(
Nephrotic Syndrome
may result)
Gastrointestinal injury
Metallic Taste
Gingivostomatitis
Loose teeth
Burning mouth
Sensation
Hypersalivation
Chronic ingestion of Methylmercury (organic Mercury)
Delayed neurotoxicity
Visual Field
constricted
Ataxia
Sensory deficit
Tremor
or spasticity
Dysarthria
Hearing Loss
Hyperreflexia
Labs
Urine Mercury level
Best correlates with Mercury Toxicity
Acceptable urine levels <20 mcg/L
Treatment required if urine Mercury >150 mcg/L
Blood Mercury level
Required to detect organic Mercury exposure
Acceptable blood levels <10 mcg/L
Treatment required if blood Mercury >35 mcg/L
Radiology
Injected metallic Mercury is radiopaque
Management
Acute Exposure
Mercury ingestion
See
Gastric Decontamination
Gastric Lavage
Use
Protein
solutions (e.g. milk)
Charcoal not useful (does not bind Mercury)
Mercury Inhalation
Supportive care
Antibiotic
s not indicated
Corticosteroid
s not indicated
Mercury aspiration
Airway Suction
ing
Postural drainage
Mercury injection
Surgical
Debridement
Management
Chelating agents for acute-chronic exposure
Indications
See Labs above for urine and blood Mercury levels
Agents
Dimercaprol
Indicated in inorganic Mercury Poisoning
Contraindicated in organic, methylmercury
Poisoning
DMSA
Preferred agent for acute and chronic
Poisoning
Not FDA indicated
D-Penicillamine
Needs complete
Gastric Decontamination
before use
Management
Environmental clean-up
Precautions
Do not use a vacuum (volatilizes Mercury)
Dispose of contaminated absorbable surfaces
Small spills (e.g. broken
Thermometer
)
Scoop onto stiff card
Move Mercury into bag and seal bag
Dispose of Mercury as hazardous waste
Larger spills
Sand or mercury
Decontamination
kit
Consider contacting
Hazmat
Prevention
Precautions regarding dietary fish intake
Avoid fish high in Mercury content
Shark
Swordfish
King Mackerel
Tilefish
Limit fish with moderate Mercury content (6 oz/week)
Albacore tuna
Locally caught fish with unknown concentration
Choose fish with lowest Mercury content
Salmon
Pollock
Canned light tuna
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