Overview
What is an environmental illness?
Chemicals, fumes, pollution, allergens, and other health hazards
are common in our environment, and sometimes they can make us sick. Maybe you
have mysterious headaches that only occur on weekends. Or you develop nausea
and a rash after moving into a newly built home. Such symptoms can be caused by
exposure to
toxins commonly found in our homes, workplaces, and
communities. For example:
- Those weekend headaches may be caused by a
faulty furnace leaking carbon monoxide. Using a fireplace could create a back
draft of furnace gases that can cause headaches. Replacing the furnace could
make the headaches go away.
- Building materials in new homes—insulation, particleboard,
carpet adhesive—emit formaldehyde, which can cause nausea and rashes. Also, the
paper that makes up the outside layers of drywall provides the right conditions
for the growth of mold. Exposure to these molds may cause respiratory problems
and allergylike symptoms and may provoke
asthma attacks.
You and your doctor may not know what is causing your illness, or
it may be mistaken for another problem. Environmental hazards can cause or
aggravate a wide range of common medical problems. A thorough evaluation of the
environments in which you work, live, and play could reveal what is causing
your illness.
What causes environmental illnesses?
Short- and long-term exposure to hazards such as chemicals,
allergens, pollution, and other toxins can cause environmental illnesses.
Chemicals in cigarettes are known to cause lung cancer. Exposure to asbestos, a
common insulating material that can be found in older buildings, can cause
tumors in the linings of the chest and abdomen, lung cancer, and other
diseases. Wood-burning stoves and improperly vented gas ranges can cause
respiratory problems. Drinking water from a rural well contaminated with
pesticides or solvents from a nearby industrial plant could cause cancer or
neurological problems. Inhalation of spores from molds that grow on building
materials can cause respiratory problems and may make asthma more severe.
Exposure to certain chemicals in the workplace may cause sterility, especially
in men.
But often we don't know such exposures are causing our sickness.
We don't know the types or amounts of chemicals to which we've been exposed,
especially when the symptoms of disease or illness don't develop for years. For
example, most cancers have a latent, or silent, period that can last a decade
or more before symptoms develop.
What symptoms do environmental illnesses cause?
Symptoms depend on the environmental cause of the illness or
disease. Common symptoms include headaches, cough, fatigue, and nausea. In some
cases, you may not have any symptoms for years, until a disease progresses far
enough for you to notice signs of it. In other instances, exposure may cause
immediate allergic reactions, such as when contact with
dust mites, cockroaches, pollen, or pets triggers an
asthma attack. Or symptoms may emerge more gradually and become worse as the
time of exposure continues.
For some people, going to work in a building with poor indoor air
quality may cause headaches, coughs, dizziness, fatigue, and nausea. The
building may be improperly ventilated, causing exposure to fumes from cleaning
solvents or cigarette smoke. New buildings or new carpets emit formaldehyde,
which is known to cause symptoms such as nausea, respiratory problems, dry or
inflamed skin, and eye irritation. Buildings may have bacteria, molds, or
viruses that have built up in heating and cooling ducts, carpets, ceiling
tiles, or insulation and can cause fever, chills, muscle aches, cough, and
other respiratory symptoms.
Symptoms of environmental illness are difficult to diagnose and
may be mistaken for other medical problems. If you suspect exposure to toxins
could be making you sick, it is important that you discuss your thoughts with a
doctor.
What are the symptoms of environmental illness?
You or your doctor may not know your illness is related to a
toxic exposure unless your symptoms won't go away or they appear only at
specific times or places. Good detective work by you and your doctor will be
needed to diagnose an environmental illness. For example, if you keep a log of
your symptoms, you may discover that you feel nauseous and sluggish throughout
your workweek, but you feel better on weekends and vacations. Poor indoor air
quality, which some people call "sick building syndrome," may then be suspected
as the cause of your illness. Your symptoms may go away when you are out of the
environment that is making you sick, for example, a recent remodel of a room in
your house or a new office building at work. But unless you discuss the
variations in your symptoms with your doctor, it will be difficult for him or
her to make such a connection.
Checking the walls of your home or workplace for efflorescence—a
white, powdery or crystalline substance that accumulates on the surface of
concrete, plaster, or masonry—can be a good first indicator of the presence of
molds or moisture that can lead to molds. Air sampling, in which trained
professionals analyze a sample of the air in a building, is another way to find
out if molds are present.
Often, solving the mystery isn't so simple. A more serious
illness may be caused by something to which you were exposed decades ago.
Perhaps in the past you lived near a hazardous waste site, or you had a job
remodeling old homes, which exposed you to asbestos. Before talking to your
doctor, think about your history, previous jobs, homes, and activities.
How are environmental illnesses diagnosed?
Doctors and other health professionals can diagnose an
environmental illness by taking an exposure history, which is a lengthy set of
questions about your home, workplace, habits, occupations, lifestyle, family,
and other matters. Your answers to the questions can help identify chemicals or
other hazards to which you've been exposed recently or in the past and help
your doctor decide whether you need specific tests to diagnose your
illness.
How are environmental illnesses treated?
Initial treatment for an environmental illness includes
eliminating or reducing your exposure to what is making you sick. For example,
one of the most effective ways to improve air quality is to get rid of the
source of the pollution. Gas stoves can be adjusted to reduce emissions or
replaced with electric stoves. You can also increase the amount of fresh air
coming into your home, change furnace and air-conditioning filters often, and
make sure exhaust fans in the kitchen and bathroom are working. Furnaces can be
placed outside of your main living areas or even in the garage.
One of the first and best steps you can take to clean the air in
your house is to not allow smoking in your house—if smokers live in or visit
your home, have them smoke outside.
Treatment beyond these first steps varies based on your symptoms,
the cause of the illness, and what part of your body is affected.
The health effects of mold exposure are best treated by
preventing or restricting further mold growth. Maintaining a dry environment
indoors can help restrict the growth of molds. Humidity should be kept at less
than 50%.1 Though it may be difficult to do, it is
important to eliminate exposure to molds that have already infected your home
or workplace or your child's school. Molds should be removed from buildings by
trained professionals, and you or your children should not return to the
building until the removal process is complete.