Subject: Mold health hazards
In response to the mold spore thread: I would like to relate two real life experiences. #1) Four or five years (or more) ago I had to move a rather large pile of wood mulch, at least two cubic yards, which had been sitting in our front yard for months. Early in the mornings the pile would be steaming, doing what it was supposed to do, decompose. When I first dug into the pile with my pitchfork, a mass of steam exuded/exploded from it as well as a bunch of other stuff which could have only been clouds of mold spores, in retrospect, actually hours after the occurrence. Well, I did not use a mask of any sort while doing this. Later that day I became ill, got the violent vibrating chills. I was all shook up. I was bedridden for several days, afterwards, because of this careless and unsafe episode. (Isn't it awful to realize, when you are doing something, that you are not doing it right, you damn well know you're doing it wrong, but you carry on anyway because you're too lazy to set it up to do it right after you've realized that there is a potential problem?) I concluded that it must have been the mold spores. Since that time I have been sensitized to mold, as well as organic solvent vapors, and have gotten the same symptoms after working with these materials over the years since then. #2) Several years earlier than the above episode I was interning in a book conservation lab. The conservator gave me something to work on, I don't recall what, which needed some chemical treatment with ethanol. The conservator thought that ethanol was a relatively innocuous chemical. I performed the treatment, being the neophyte that I was then, at my bench, which took several hours, if my memory serves, without the safety benefits of fume hood or respirator. Afterwards, I started to get intermittent white flashes in my peripheral vision. I do not recall the incubation period for the start of this occurrence. Nor can I directly prove that the ethanol caused this effect, but this is the causality I believe. The flashes lasted for months. Then they stopped. Maybe because I had not been working with ethanol since that occurrence. I have learned my lesson(s) and use a mask regularly now, whether working with attic insulation or piles of mulch. Recently, I had to clean a lot of 20+ year-old ceramic tile (which is no longer available) of its adhesive (in order to re-use it in a bathroom remodeling) and had to use lacquer thinner to do it. This stuff is really noxious. I bought a disposable organic vapor respirator to do the work, and I used a fan as well to blow the fumes away from me. I felt better about doing the work prepared thusly, but I was not thrilled about doing it at all. Also, I had to train a fan on the tiles days afterwards to assist in volatilizing the residual solvent in the tiles. (The tiles were soaked in the thinner for more than eight hours.) You choose the moral from these tales. What did Forrest Gump say? "Stupid is as stupid does." Robert Milevski Preservation Librarian Princeton University Libraries *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:23 Distributed: Friday, September 30, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-23-003 ***Received on Thursday, 29 September, 1994