Methylmercury poisoning: Long‐term clinical, radiological, toxicological, and pathological studies of an affected family
- 1 June 1994
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Neurology
- Vol. 35 (6), 680-688
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.410350608
Abstract
For 3 months in 1969 a family in the United States that included a pregnant mother consumed pork containing methylmercury. Children, aged 20, 13, and 8 years and a neonate, developed severe neurological signs. Twenty‐two years later, the 2 oldest had cortical blindness or constricted visual fields, diminished hand proprioception, choreoathetosis, and atentional deficits. Magnetic resonance images showed tissue loss in the calcarine and parietal cortices and cerebellar folia. The youngest had quadriplegia, blindness, and severe mental retradation until their deaths. The brain of the 8‐year‐old who died at age 30 showed cortical atrophy, neuronal loss, and gliosis, most pronounced in the paracentral and parietooccipital regions. The total mercury level in formalin‐fixed, left occipital cortex was 1,974 ng/gm as measured by atomic absorption. Regional brain mercury levels correlated with extent of brain damage. A control patient had 38.5 ng of mercury/gm in the occipital cortex. Systemic organs in the patient and a control subject had comparable mercury levels. In mercury‐intoxicated rats, we found that only 5 to 10% of total brain mercury was lost by formalin fixation. Brain inorganic mercury in the patient ranged from 82 to 100%. Since inorganic mercury crosses the blood‐brain barrier poorly, biotransformation of methyl to inorganic mercury may have occurred after methylmercury crossed the blood‐brain barrier, accounting for its persistence in brain and causing part of the brain damage.Keywords
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