Thallium poisoning

Thallium poisoning
Poisoning with the element thallium which enters the environment primarily from coal-burning and smelting. It stays in the air, water, and soil for a long time and is not broken down. It builds up in fish and shellfish. The major source of exposure to thallium for most people is eating food contaminated with thallium. Other sources of exposure include breathing workplace air in industries that use thallium, smoking cigarettes, living near hazardous waste sites containing thallium, and touching (or, for children, eating) soil contaminated with thallium. Exposure to high levels of thallium can result in harmful health effects. Studies in people who ingested large amounts of thallium over a short time have reported vomiting, diarrhea, temporary hair loss, and effects on the nervous system, lungs, heart, liver, and kidneys. It has caused death. A study on workers exposed on the job over several years reported nervous system effects, such as numbness of fingers and toes, from breathing thallium. It is not known what the effects are from ingesting low levels of thallium over a long time. The word "thallium" is a Latinized version of the Greek "thallos" meaning "green stalk" because of a characteristic bright green line in the spectrum of the element.

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poisoning, usually of children or domestic animals, due to ingestion of thallium compounds. It is marked initially by gastrointestinal signs and symptoms such as nausea and abdominal pain. This is followed within a few days by alopecia; neurologic and psychic symptoms such as ataxia, restlessness, delirium, hallucinations, delusions, semicoma, and blindness; and liver and kidney damage. Called also thallitoxicosis and thallotoxicosis.

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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