A woman in Minnesota lost part of
her vision and inadvertently put her entire household at risk of
mercury poisoning, most likely from using beauty creams used for
whitening skin containing high levels of the toxic chemical, according to a
case report shared exclusively with CNN.
The report, shared by Dr. Erin
Batdorff with the Minnesota Poison Control System, details the extensive
symptoms experienced by the woman, also a mother, and how home visits conducted
by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) found high levels of mercury
in her children's bedrooms, bedding, household towels and laundry area.
The woman, whose name has been
concealed in the report to protect her identity, was referred to Batdorff's
team after she reported an array of symptoms to multiple doctors, ranging from
insomnia and leg pain to muscle weakness, fatigue and, eventually, the loss of
her peripheral vision (which Batdorff says is a more extreme symptom). Clinical
tests revealed elevated levels of mercury in her blood and urine.
Mercury has long been used in
skin whitening products due to its ability to block the production of melanin,
the pigment that gives color to skin. US Food and Drug Administration
regulations and the Minamata Convention on Mercury – an international treaty to
protect human health and the environment from mercury – limit the use of
mercury in cosmetics, excluding those used around the eye area, to 1mg/kg of
mercury, also known as 1 part per million (ppm).
The products found in the woman's
home ranged from 4,590 ppm to 18,000 ppm.
The woman's story is one of many
in the state of Minnesota and other parts of the US in recent years where women
and entire households are believed to have been exposed to inorganic mercury
from the prolonged use of skin whitening products that fail to disclose they
contain harmful levels of the toxic chemical.
Beauty products containing mercury remain easily accessible in local malls and markets throughout the US and through online retailers, experts say, aided by the fact that they fail to list mercury as an ingredient. Batdorff and other experts are calling for greater awareness, regular testing of products and stricter enforcement of regulations to help combat the problem.
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