My husband
has lived in the rental house for three years, and I moved in a year
ago after we married. He has experienced increasingly worse asthma-
like symptoms, and I have developed respiratory problems since moving
to South Texas. Neither of us ever had asthma before. Our rental
house had a “huge” water leak by the chimney, and we had it tested
from mold. Results came back as Aspergillus/Penicillium- like spores
68,000,counts /cm2 and Chaetomium 196,000 counts/ cm2.
My husband complains of chest pain and pressure. We have seen
pulmonologists and cardiologists, and they say everything is normal.
Also, we're
both having severe back muscle spasms and soreness. Mine was so bad I
had thought I had a kidney stone and went into the emergency room. I
am also experiencing slight mental confusion and memory loss. Can any
of the symptoms be caused by mold poisoning? We are beginning to
think we're crazy.- Amy,
Texas
Exposure to airborne mold appears to be a common
cause of asthma. The increase in the severity of asthmatic symptoms
with time indicates that the causal agent for your husband's asthma is
associated with your house. Supporting evidence is your development
of respiratory problems as well.
You describe a huge water leak by the chimney and
surface sampling results that are quite high. Such a water leak would
be a major risk factor for mold infestation of building materials as
confirmed by surface testing.
Both Aspergillus and Penicillium
are commonly found growing in and on water damaged building materials.
Exposure to airborne Penicillium spores has been shown to be
epidemiologically associated with the development of asthma in
children and it or Aspergillus may be the primary cause of
asthma in this case.
Chaetomium is a species that readily grows
on paper and paper products (such as the face paper on gypsum board).
It produces large spores that are less likely to enter the respiratory
tract to cause asthma compared to Aspergillus or Penicillium.
In this case no air sampling results are
available. Such testing can indicate the magnitude of exposure and
health risk. However, indoor air quality scientists have concluded
that the presence of visible mold is a more reliable indicator of mold
associated respiratory disease and airborne concentrations. This is
primarily due to the fact that airborne mold concentrations vary so
widely over the course of time. Such variability reduces the
reliability of statistical analyses that support epidemiological
investigations.
Muscle spasms/soreness and that have not been
associated with mold exposures; nor has confusion and memory loss. If
such relationships did exist they would be secondary to other symptoms
produced a result of exposure to mold.
No you're not crazy. Such building- related
health problems are very common; you're not suffering alone. I
recommend that you request your landlord to remediate the water
damage/mold problem. If not you should seek alternative housing at
your earliest convenience.
June 11,2004
Indoor Environmental Quality (2000), Thad Godish Ph.D.,
C.I.H
Direct E-mail
00tjgodish@bsu.edu