Black Mold Symptoms
The media often refers to Black mold as toxic or deadly mold and this fungi is us usually associated with Stachybotrys chartarum-a type of greenish-black mold known to cause heavy water damage. However, not all molds that appear to be black are Stachybotrys. Black Mold is found in the walls of homes, apartments and schools where a leak has let water into the walls. Black mold can make some people very sick, especially affecting those with asthma very severely. This is because the Black mold’s microscopic spores can get into the lungs and prove fatal at times.
Effects of Black mold
Black mold or Stachybotrys, causes bleeding in the lung, which can be fatal for infants and pregnant women. The Stachybotrys mold spores are inhaled into the lungs, where they weaken the blood vessels, causing the lungs to bleed.
Symptoms of Black mold
The common symptoms of this toxic mold are coughing up blood and frequent nosebleeds, which is recorded by most patients suffering from Stachybotrys poisoning. Stachybotrys is found in wet areas and places affected by leaky pipes and within or on walls exposed to excessive moisture. Stachybotrys mold is wet, black, and slimy and it smears when touched. Black Mold poisoning symptoms are akin to the ordinary flu warning signs but can lead to toxic life threatening conditions. The amount of mold present and a person’s sensitivity to the mold are important factors in how one’s body may react to mold. The people at greatest risk are infants, elderly and immune-suppressed individuals and this category are most likely to exhibit the harshest of reactions when exposed to toxic mold. Black mold symptoms include nosebleed without injury to the nose and in the case of many an infant or child, there may be a chronic cough with chest congestion.
Allergy related Black mold symptoms
For those who are allergic to mold, symptoms will usually include a runny nose, itchy/watery eyes, coughing, and sneezing and throat irritation. These may become severe if the individual has a chronic condition such as sinusitis and asthma. While allergic reactions are common, exposure to a large enough quantity of mycotoxins produced by some molds can occur and can lead to headaches, respiratory difficulties, skin irritation, decreased attention span and difficulty in concentration as well as dizzy spells.
janice evraets said,
March 31, 2009 @ 1:11 pm
I am wondering if there is a way to get out of a lease with a landlord that will not take care of the mold growing in my daughters basement. She gets public housing assistance and is in a year lease with a slum lord who they are afraid will not let them out of their lease. His wife went in the basement with a bleach and water spraybottle(1) and claimed to have taken care of it. The cable guy that installed her cable told her that the mold was really bad down there and warned them of it. My grandson is disabled and has epilepsy and is tube fed. He has been throwing up alot more than normal, has had pneumonia and just recently an upper respiritory infection. He has been asphirating alot more than normal. He has no gag reflex, and I think this is all coming from the basement mold. I have talked to my daughter and told her to move, but the landlord will hold them to their lease and charge them for breaking it. He feels the mold is taken care of. Do you possibly know if there are laws to protect her from him doing that? I am worried about my grandsons health. Thankyou.