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Should We Take a Black Mold Health Problem For Granted? |
by Gerard K. Lawson |
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| This is because there are different types of black mold. Majority of these are not too harmful and may only make you teary-eyed or give you the sniffles after being exposed to it. On the other hand, there are black mold species that could give off toxins that are extremely harmful to the body.
Stachybotrys chartarum is an example of a black mold that possesses highly poisonous mycotoxins. This mold species has been feared since the 1930s when horses and other farm animals in Ukraine and in areas in Europe which were given straw contaminated with S. chartarum became severely ill - exhibiting symptoms of stachybotryotoxicosis - with many of them even dying. The symptoms experienced by these hapless animals include severe irritation of the eyes, nose, throat, and mouth; a drop in the number of white blood cells; various nervous disorders, haemorrhage, and dermal necrosis. It was later found out by Russian scientists that the cellulose-rich straw had been the breeding grounds of Stachybotrys chartarum. This black mold health problem, stachybotryotoxicosis, did not stop in that era. In fact, recent studies revealed reports of farm hands becoming infected with the highly dangerous mycotoxins of S. chartarum through the handling of contaminated straw. In the first half of the 1990s, a strange case of pulmonary haemorrhage outbreak shook the city of Cleveland, OH. This was attributed to Stachybotrys chartarum at the time, but subsequent studies linking the black mold to the outbreak were not too conclusive. Prevention of black mold health problems There is little else physicians can do to treat a disease stemming from inhalation or contamination with black mold, but we can always prevent black mold health problems by keeping this undesirable mold away from the homes we live in. Non-toxic varieties of Black Mold may cause mild sneezing, rashes, stinging in the eyes, dry cough, sore throat, headaches, and shortness of breath. Those with asthma, especially kids and the elderly, may be severely affected even by the non-toxic black mold. Toxic black mold, however, should not be taken lightly. When a person is exposed to its spores, the health problems it can cause may be extremely serious or may even cause death. This is because it can attack even the nervous system and cause damage to almost any body part or organ it can reach. Even a mild exposure to its toxins may cause hair loss, kidney failure and, breathing problems. Other effects are memory loss and depression attacks. Old buildings are favorite breeding grounds of toxib clack mold because these are rarely inspected and are often run-down. This means that it may have a lot of leaks and moisture can easily seep into crevices in the structure, inviting the proliferation of the mold and the spread of attendant black mold health problems.
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