1: Arch Environ Health.
2003 Jul;58(7):399-405. Related Articles,
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Effects of toxic exposure to molds and mycotoxins in building-
related illnesses
Rea WJ, Didriksen N, Simon TR, Pan Y, Fenyves EJ, Griffiths B.
Environmental Health Center-Dallas, Dallas, Texas 75231-4262, USA.
wjr@e...
The authors studied 100 patients who had been exposed to toxic molds
in their homes. The predominant molds identified were Alternaria,
Cladosporium, Aspergillus, Penicillium, Stachybotrys, Curvularia,
Basidiomycetes, Myxomycetes, smuts, Epicoccus, Fusarium, Bipolaris,
and Rhizopus. A variety of tests were performed on all, or on
subgroups of, these patients. Sensitivities and exposures were
confirmed in all patients by intradermal skin testing for individual
molds (44-98% positive), and by measurement of serum antibodies.
Abnormalities in T and B cells, and subsets, were found in more than
80% of the patients. The findings of trichothecene toxin and
breakdown products in the urine, serum antibodies to molds, and
positive intradermal skin tests confirmed mycotoxin exposure.
Respiratory signs (e.g., rhinorrhea, sinus tenderness, wheezing)
were found in 64% of all patients, and physical signs and symptoms
of neurological dysfunction (e.g., inability to stand on the toes or
to walk a straight line with eyes closed, as well as short-term
memory loss) were identified in 70% of all patients.
Objective
abnormal autonomic nervous system tests were positive in all 100
patients tested. Brain scans, conducted using triple-head single
photon emission computed tomography, were abnormal in 26 (86%) of 30
(subgroup of the 100) patients tested. Objective neuropsychological
evaluations of 46 of the patients who exhibited symptoms of
neurological impairment showed typical abnormalities in short-term
memory, executive function/judgment, concentration, and hand/eye
coordination.