Workplace Medical Mystery: What is causing a recycling worker’s respiratory distress?
Posted on byJoe worked at a metal recycling facility in Nevada. His typical job duties included operating a material handler to load scrap metal into a shear for crushing. During his shift at the recycling facility, Joe looked up to see a plume of thick yellow smoke swirl around a pile of scrap metal and was suddenly overcome with shortness of breath, coughing, chest pressure, and eye irritation. He thought about grabbing a fire extinguisher but then ran away from the smoke until the air cleared. Joe’s supervisor saw that he was in distress and called 9-1-1. When medical help arrived, Joe’s blood oxygen saturation was 87% and increased to 94% with supplemental oxygen (normal saturations are within the range of 95% to 100% while breathing room air).
Emergency response personnel transported him to a local hospital. Although alert, he had an elevated heart rate and difficulty breathing and quickly developed respiratory failure with inadequate blood oxygen levels. He was intubated and placed on mechanical ventilation roughly 20 min after arriving at the hospital. He was also administered inhaled nitric oxide to improve oxygenation. X-rays of his chest showed fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema), and bloodwork revealed an acid-base disorder (respiratory and metabolic acidosis). Additional tests led to the diagnosis of acute respiratory distress syndrome or ARDS. Joe’s supervisor remembered that the system for scanning incoming metal for radioactive material had been malfunctioning. He relayed this information to the paramedics.
Prior to this sudden onset of respiratory failure, Joe’s only chronic medical problems were high blood pressure and a heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation. He was a nonsmoker and had no past history of lung disease. His hobby was woodworking. His wife reported that he had stripped and restored an antique dining table the previous weekend.
What was causing Joe’s illness?
Check back on Friday for the next installment of Workplace Medical Mysteries to see what is making Joe sick. Think you know? Tell us what you think it is in the comment section below.
R. Reid Harvey, DVM, MPH, is an Epidemiologist in the NIOSH Respiratory Health Division.
Michelle R. Martin, MS, is a Health Communications Specialist in the NIOSH Respiratory Health Division.
Julie Tisdale-Pardi, MA, is the Coordinator of the NIOSH Science Blog.
This blog is part of the NIOSH Workplace Medical Mystery Series. The names and personal details of the characters are fictitious and do not represent an actual person or persons.
7 comments on “Workplace Medical Mystery: What is causing a recycling worker’s respiratory distress?”
Comments listed below are posted by individuals not associated with CDC, unless otherwise stated. These comments do not represent the official views of CDC, and CDC does not guarantee that any information posted by individuals on this site is correct, and disclaims any liability for any loss or damage resulting from reliance on any such information. Read more about our comment policy ».
Comments are closed.
Chlorine is not the only possibility, it has to be on the list for these reasons:
1. Yellow color (other things do this)
2. Rapid onset of pulmonary edema (Makes nitrogen oxides, yellow-brown, less likely. Onset slower in most cases and different)
3. Acidosis
Missing is a report of instantaneous irritation, which should be present with chlorine. (The wood stripping is interesting and might have set him up a bit if it was methylene chloride, but it is not the cause nor does the clinical picture have to do with a radiation hazard. )
Breathing in metal particles and getting exposed to H2SO4 gas can cause problems
What about zinc from galvanized metals?
Scrap metals can be contaminated with various substances if not processed prior to transporting to the recycling room. Yellow gas is indicative of sulfur and is dangerous to breathe. The binding affinity in the blood to the heme which normally carries oxygen reduces the available sites for oxygen. Competing with the sulfur compound with the nitrous compound speeds up the recovery of the oxygenation rate because though it out-competes the sulfur it’s volatility makes it one to leave the system quickly in the lungs. It poses some risk of volatility in the body and is best to have it monitored in hospital where the next response can be ready if the worst happens. Sounds like quick response at the site and throughout the course has minimized the damage. Still there are things to watch out for in followup due to the long range effects of these substances. This is my memory of the physiology classes of medical school and the chemistry classes unto my Bachelor’s degree.
Considering his job, acute cadmium inhalation injury is suspected.
I’d check first for chlorine exposure – possibly a container crushed in the shear.
Is there a history of what metals were being recycled? What was the source of the scrap metal?