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Mercury Mercury
Properties and Health Effects

Mercury and its compounds exist in three general forms:
  • Elemental (or metallic).
  • Inorganic. Mercury can combine with other elements (mainly chlorine, sulfur, and oxygen) to form inorganic mercury compounds.
  • Organic. Mercury may combine with carbon or carbon-containing substances to make organic mercury compounds. These organic compounds are further divided between alkyl (carbon-chain) and aryl (aromatic ring) groups.
Although all mercury compounds are toxic, the small-chain alkyl compounds are the most hazardous. Mercury compounds vary in toxicity, so OSHA provides standards for each. It is important to clarify which category a compound belongs to before comparing it with a standard or determining its relative toxicity.

Properties
Health Effects

According to Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), mercury is not classifiable as a human carcinogen, although the EPA classifies mercury chloride and methyl mercury as possible human carcinogens. The following resources contain valuable information about the health effects of mercury.
  • Mercury. Center for the Evaluation of Risks to Human Reproduction (CERHR). Contains an overview, description, sources, and more information on mercury and its effects.
  • Mercury Compounds. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), (2002, January). Discusses hazards associated with mercury exposure, both acute and chronic.
  • The Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances: Mercury. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), (2006, November). Gives synonyms, mutation, reproductive and tumorgenic data, acute toxicity, standards and regulations, NIOSH documentation, and status in federal agencies.
  • NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Publication No. 2005 -149, (2005, September). Contains exposure limits, physical description, health effects, and personal protective equipment.
  • ToxFAQs for Mercury. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), (1999, April). Contains general information on mercury.
  • ATSDR Public Health Statement for Mercury. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), (1999, March). Discusses exposure pathways, health effects, and exposure limits.
  • Health Effects of Mercury. Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS), (1998, December 21). Discusses the main health effects of mercury as well as local and systematic effects.
  • Mercury, elemental (CASRN 7439-97-6). Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), (1998, September 7). Discusses oral RfD assessment, inhalation RfC assessment and carcinogenity assessment, and evaluates evidence and documentation review.
  • Dimethylmercury. OSHA Hazard Information Bulletin (HIB), (1998, March 9). Provides information about a death of a chemistry professor in June 1997 was apparently due to a single exposure to dimethylmercury.
  • Occupational Safety and Health Guideline for Mercury Vapor. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), OSHA, Department of Energy (DOE) Health Guidelines. Summarizes pertinent information about mercury vapor for workers and employers as well as for physicians, industrial hygienists, and other occupational safety and health professionals who may need such information to conduct effective occupational safety and health programs.
Epidemiological Studies
  • Jones, L., J. Bunnell, and J. Stillman. "A 30-year follow-up of residual effects on New Zealand School Dental Nurses, from occupational mercury exposure." Human & Experimental Toxicology 26.4(2007): 367-375.
  • Williams, PL., et al. "Reconstruction of Occupational Mercury Exposures at a Chloralkali Plant." Occupational Environmental Medicine 58.2(2001): 81-86.
  • Frumkin, H., et al. "Health effects of long-term mercury exposure among chloralkali plant workers." Am. J. Ind. Med. 39.1(2001): 1-18.
  • Domingo, J., et al. "Levels of Metals and Organic Substances in Blood and Urine of Workers at a New Hazardous Waste Incinerator." Int. Arch. Occupational Environmental Health 74.4(2001): 263-269.
Occupational Exposures
  • Echeverria, D. "Mercury and Dentists." Occupational Environmental Medicine 59.5(2002): 285-286.
  • Sattler, B. "Environmental Health in the Health Care Setting." Am. Nurse 34.2(2002): 25-38; quiz 39-40.
  • Burger, J., K. Gaines, and M. Gochfeld. "Ethnic Differences in Risk from Mercury Among Savannah River Fishermen." Risk Anal. 21.3(2001): 533-544.
  • Amalgam and A. Donoghue. "Mercury Toxicity Due to the Smelting of Placer Gold Recovered by Mercury." Occupational Medicine 48.6(1998): 413-415.
  • Bittner, A., et al. "Behavioral Effects of Low-Level Exposure to Hg-0 Among Dental Professionals: A Cross-Study Evaluation of Psychomotor Effects." Neurotoxicology and Teratology 20.4(1998): 429-439.
  • Bellander, T. and E. Merler. "Historical Exposure to Inorganic Mercury at the Smelter Works of Abbadia San Salvatore, Italy." Annals of Occupational Hygiene 42.2(1998): 81-90.
  • Ritchie, K. and E. MacDonald. "A Pilot Study of the Effect of Low Level Exposure to Mercury on the Health of Dental Surgeons." Occupational and Environmental Medicine 52.12(1995): 813-817.
  • Krochmalnyckyj, R. "Exposure to Mercury From a Metal Furnace." Applied Occupational and Environmental Hygiene 10.9(1995): 730-732.
  • Koizumi, A., et al. "Mercury, Not Sulphur Dioxide, Poisoning as Cause of Smelter Disease in Industrial Plants Producing Sulphuric Acid." Lancet 343.8910(1994): 1411-1412.
 Safety and
 Health Topics
 
  Mercury
  OSHA Standards
  Properties and Health Effects
  Evaluation
  Possible Solutions
  Additional
Information
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Content Reviewed 10/04/2007
 
 

 
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