The Dangerousness of Mercury Vapor
By Alfred Stock, Berlin-Dahlem
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut fuer Chemie
(Eingeg. Febr. 9, 1926)
Translated by Birgit Calhoun
By Alfred Stock, Berlin-Dahlem
Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut fuer Chemie
(Eingeg. Febr. 9, 1926)
Translated by Birgit Calhoun
When
I am making the decision to report without hesitation to a wider circle about
my personal problems, which ordinarily wouldn't concern others and would not be
worthy of publication, I am driven by the intense desire to warn emphatically
all those who have to deal with metallic mercury about the dangers of this
unstable metal, and to save them from the horrible experiences which have
spoiled a great part of my life. Today I can speak about them freely because
luckily they have been concluded, and they are behind me with sufficient
distance.
The
insidious horror of mercury is not nearly sufficiently well known and is being
taken note of too little in those places where one is particularly threatened
by it, in chemical and physical laboratories.
For
nearly 25 years I have suffered from ailments, which, in the beginning, arose
only occasionally, then gradually got worse and worse and finally increased to
unbearable proportions so that I disparingly doubted my ability to continue to
work scientifically. The cause was understood neither by me nor many
outstanding physicians. They thought that it was possible that it could be
found in the especially narrow built of the nasal passages and an unusual
irritability of the nasal mucosa. Because of this, I underwent decades of
treatments of the nose with cauterizations, burnings, massages,
electrification, and bloody operations. Without success. Two years ago--a few
of my colleagues fell ill with similar symptoms--it was accidentally discovered
that it had to do with an insidious poisoning by mercury vapor. In my chemical
work, which involves testing of volatile substances by the "vacuum
method," which uses mercury-tubs, -pumps, -manometers, and -valves1),
I had been in constant contact with mercury for 25 years.
Today
there is no doubt about the diagnosis any more because all my symptoms,
although not gone completely, have more or less been diminished,
after having avoided inhaling mercury vapors for the last two years without the
use of any other healing methods.
First
I am describing the difficulties as they developed in me over time. They are
identical to an insidious mercury poisoning in every detail. I was able to
convince myself of this through my colleagues and other peers, who suffered and
still suffer from mercury vapor poisoning. Some of them, it is noted, were not
cognizant of the origin of their difficulties. Many pertinent symptoms have, up
to now, been insufficiently described. At any rate, insidious mercury vapor
poisoning has not received the attention it deserves.
With
me the situation began with slight intermittent headaches and mild drowsiness,
which increased gradually, over the years, to constant nervous restlessness and
"jitteriness." Head-pressure impaired the ability to think. It
worsened and finally became an almost uninterrupted vexing headache (sits
mostly over the eyes). I had strong vertigo, which was occasionally connected
with visual disturbances (unclear and double vision). Soon the upper air
passages were involved as well. This started with a slight transient nose cold.
This was followed by a constant "stuffy nose," which later turned
into severe nose, throat and sinus infections. They were followed, one by one,
almost without interruption, by pussy, often bloody, mucosal discharge and
scabbing, frequent sore throats and ear aches connected to auditory loss and
loss of smell (some sense of smell remained; e.g. cyanic acid). There was a
distaste for tobacco smoke. During the last years prior to recognition of the
poisoning, there were added signs: a strong flow of saliva, a sour, insipid
taste in the mouth, infections of the eyes and oral mucosa. There were little
blisters, sensitive and sore areas on the tongue, the palate, the gums and the
insides of the lips and cheeks. There was reddening of the gums and slight bleeding
while brushing the teeth. There were toothaches, receding of the gums and
formation of "pockets" and temporary loosening of individual teeth.
The mouth and tooth signs revealed themselves only (in part they only reached
their peak months after recognition of the poisoning) because, since my youth,
I have been taking good care of my teeth (among other things nightly long
rinses with 1 and 1/2% hydrogen peroxyde solution and sodium bicarbonate). If
this hadn't been the case, I might possibly have become aware of the cause of
my problems through mouth infections.
Other
signs were: Mental weariness and exhaustion, lack of inclination and inability
to perform any, particularly mental, work, and increased need for sleep. There
were tremors of the spread-out fingers and also sometimes the eyelids. There
was pain in various locations of the body, tearing in the back and limbs, and
pressure in the liver area. At times, there were disturbances of stomach and
intestinal activity, loss of appetite, sudden bladder pressure, isolated bouts
of diarrhea, which occurred without other possible causes. There were sudden
blistery rashes, e.g. on the insides of the arms and thighs.
The
most depressing accompanying sign relating to mental work was the diminshment
of memory. My memory, which had previously been excellent, left more and more
to be desired and became worse and worse until, two years ago, I suffered from
nearly complete memory loss.
Only
with the help of extensive notes and great effort was I able to put together a
scientific paper or deliver a lecture. I forgot the telephone number on the way
from the telephone book to the telephone. I forgot everything that I had once
learned by heart. I forgot the content of the book or theater play I had just
read or seen as well as my own work, which had been published. It was
impossible for me to remember numbers and names. Often even the names of good
acquaintances were lost. Specifically, I lost the ability for arithmetic and
mathematical figuring. Also my chess playing ability suffered. The impairment
of memory, particularly that of people memory and the worsening ability to do
arithmetic, seem to be signs peculiar to insidious mercury vapor poisoning.
This showed itself in blatant form in my co-workers and other people whom I got
to know who had been under the influence of mercury for a longer period of
time. Soon after all of us in the laboratory had found out what was wrong with
us, we sat down together to put down on paper a completed piece of work where
we had to do a lot of mathematics. None of us was able to add up columns of ten
to twenty multi-digit numbers without making mistakes.
While
my physical ability, e.g. mountain climbing, did not seem to have been
weakened, the ability to work mentally suffered a little, although not in as
devastating a fashion as had been the case with memory. Added to that were
depression, and a vexing inner restlessness, which later also caused restless
sleep. By nature companionable and loving life, I withdrew moodily into myself,
shied away from the public, stayed away from people and social activity, and
unlearned the joy in art and nature. Humor became rusty. Obstacles, which
formerly I would have overlooked smilingly (and am overlooking again today),
seemed insurmountable. Scientific work caused great effort. I forced myself to
go to the laboratory without being able to get anything useful accomplished in
spite of all efforts. Thought came laboriously and pedantically. I had to deny
myself working on solutions to questions beyond the nearest tasks at hand. The
lecture that used to be a pleasure became a torture. The preparations for a
lecture, the writing of a dissertation, or merely a simple letter caused
unending effort in styling the material and wrestling with the language. Not seldom
did it happen that I misspelled words or left out letters. It was not nice to
be aware of these shortcomings, not to know their cause, not to know a way to
their elimination, and to have to fear further deterioration.
All
attempts to improve the situation went awry. Staying in the mountains for many
weeks did not help. I felt hardly less ill than in Berlin. The nose treatments
and operations sometimes brought short-lived, yet never lasting relief. It was
peculiar that all mental difficulties disappeared for hours when the physician
treated certain areas of the mucosa of the upper nose with cocaine. When the
right spot was hit, headache and vertigo disappeared sometimes in a few
minutes; memory, inclination to work, and good mood reappeared, but, sadly, only
as fleeting guests. Sometimes I made use of this possibility to call them up
before a lecture, an important meeting etc.
As
already indicated, my colleagues in the laboratory, my assistants, doctorants
[PhD Candidates], and female lab workers had already suffered for some time
from all kinds of problems: Fatigue without recognizable cause, worsened
memory, mild headaches and drowsiness, occasional digestive disturbances, limb
aches, slight mouth inflammation, nose colds [runny nose], sinusitis etc. The difficulties
expressed themselves differently from person to person, whereby they came to
light foremost in the areas of lowest resistance. All of them showed fatigue
and diminished ability to perform mental tasks [work]. But nobody had the idea
that the cause of it could be the same for all of us. Only the convergence of
several lucky/unlucky circumstances finally opened our eyes.
In
1921, out of frugality, we had switched off the much more expensive power
consuming electrical ventilation system of the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institute for
Chemistry. Since the middle of 1923, two of my colleagues, an assistant and a
Spanish guest, were working on gas density measurements, which required
maintaining a constant temperature, and for this reason kept the windows and doors
closed if possible. The work had to be done by the spring of 1924 because my
assistant wanted to go into industry, and the Spanish colleague wanted to
return home. The work was performed hastily so that our ordinarily scrupulous
cleanliness suffered in every room. Spilled mercury remained unattended, and
much of it lay under tripods, in cracks and slits between the floor boards and
on tables. Thus the conditions presented themselves that, instead of the slow
insidious mercury poisoning, the more easily recognizable acute mercury
poisoning became apparent. The assistant fell ill more seriously, not only with
headaches, mental fatigue etc., but also with stronger bodily deterioration;
with tooth abscesses and such. His brother, a physician, suspected that the
symptom complex pointed to mercury poisoning. The experienced poison researcher
L. Lewin [Louis Lewin, 1850-1929] whom we consulted checked out all laboratory
personnel and declared that, based on his experience, he was certain that all
of us were suffering from mercury poisoning. Indeed the test showed (according
to the procedure described in the following memorandum) mercury in the air of
the workrooms as well as in the urine of all involved. The mercury content of
the air in the individual rooms was quite varied: Depending on the results of
the specimens it showed thousandth or hundredth of mg, i.e. only a small
fraction of what the air under saturation with mercury vapor can accomodate. At
room temperature, taking .001 mm mercury saturation pressure as its base value,
this figures to be about 12 mg per cubic meter. Since man breathes in about 1/2
cubic meter air per hour, and the inhaled mercury apparently3) is
retained for the most part in the lungs, it would require a very extended
period of time in mercury saturated air to suffer from acute mercury poisoning.
However it takes a long time after inhaling mercury containing air before the
poisoning becomes obvious. For one or more years the signs may be limited to
fatigue and slow diminuition of mental performance and memory. Thus the already
mentioned Spanish colleague, for example, showed outward signs of inflammation
of the oral cavity only at the very end of the year he stayed in our
laboratory. The symptoms reached their climax months after he had left us, and
after he was removed from the influence of mercury. He had noticed the mental
effects much earlier without being able to explain the cause. "For me, it
was," he said, "as if I was getting dumber and dumber in
Germany." And I had to make similar observations with my remaining
co-workers. Thus all my PhD candidates had difficulty withstanding the rigors
of the doctor's exams. The PhD candidates and assistants recovered after a few
years, once they had left the laboratory without being aware of the mercury
poisoning. As for me, the effects of the minute amounts of mercury increased
over the course of decades as described in the following narrative.
Particularly
significant for insidious mercury poisoning is a noticeable coming and going of
symptoms. Following a few days or weeks of improved well-being comes, sometimes
setting in suddenly, a time of increased ill health. This also happens in the
form of frequent relapses during the recovery period. As soon as my illness had
reached its pinnacle, there were, as a rule, one or two tolerable days. Then
the saliva flow, runny nose, and sinusitis, starting from the nose down to the
throat and sliding down to the bronchi, increased again. There were tooth
inflammations, highest fatigability and drowsiness, vexing headache, often also
tearing and diarrhea. Headache, drowsiness and memory loss are connected to the
irritation of the nerves leading to the upper part of the nose seen in the
already mentioned effect of cocaine application on the nasal mucosa.
Apparently
there are many similarities between insidious mercury poisoning and the better
known lead poisoning. The [latter] is more thoroughly researched because it
happens more often in industry. It, too, concerns mainly the nervous system and
shows the same waxing and waning of the symptom complex4).
"After a period of health the poison can suddenly, without cause, display
its effects again by evoking an attack of lead colic or other symptoms. This
phenomenon can only be explained by the poison having been encapsulated for a
long time in a place in the body to which, suddenly, the circulation has access
again..."5). According to F. Schuetz and H. Bernhardt6)
lead deposits itself preferably in the spleen, gall bladder, and brain, and is
primarily excreted with the bile, possibly also through the colon wall. The
kidneys, in this case, are less involved in the acute and chronic course of
poisoning. Mercury seems to act similarly. After one year of excluding mercury
as the cause of mercury poisoning, it could not be detected in my urine, in
spite of the fact that there were still very strong signs of illness. The
saliva, however, still contained mercury7).
After
we had recognized the source of our illness, our first worry was how to protect
ourselves from mercury in the future. The first thing, of course, was to remove
carefully everything on tables, in drawers, slits, cracks and joints, and under
damaged areas of the linoleum flooring, whereby a modified "vacuum
cleaner" (consisting of suction connection, suction bottle with a long
rubber hose in front of which was attached a cut-burner type widened glass
nozzle) served us well. We had the linoleum repaired. All cracks in the work
tables were eliminated. The dangerous corners between floors and the so-called
scrub molding were rounded off (putty, painted with oil paint) so that they
were more easily accessible for cleaning. Wherever tripods stood for a longer
period of time, the joints between tripod and table tops were also closed off
with putty. All open mercury surfaces on tubs, manometer holders etc. were
covered as completely as possible with fit-cut cellon plates. We avoided eating
in the work rooms or saving food and took especially good care cleaning our
hands (particularly brushing our finger nails) after handling mercury. We also
paid good attention so that no mercury fell into pockets and folds of the work
coats. Moreover we gave full attention to the airing out of the work rooms by
testing the success with air analyses (Compare the following memorandum). It was
soon apparent that the reinstallation of the strong house ventilation system
(very strong ventilators in the attic suck the air out through hoods; fresh air
enters from channels through flaps above the doors) was not nearly sufficient
enough to make the air mercury free. The situation in our laboratory is
inopportune in that we are working with particularly many mercury apparatuses
whereby open mercury surfaces and occasional sprinkling of mercury is not
altogether avoidable. An added factor is that the work rooms in the very modern
and well-built and furnished Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut for Chemistry are so large
(several hundred cubic meters air space) that the air does not get renewed fast
enough by the ventilation system. In this regard smaller rooms may be
advantageous because, naturally, the same ventilation works better and causes
faster replacement of the air8). Sufficiently airing ventilation, in
this case, as it turned out, is obtainable only through constantly opening
windows and creating a draft (regulated by temperature, windspeed, and
-direction). At the same time the ventilation system is at work. Because it
rests at night, the laboratory is being supplied with fesh air through opening
the windows wide. This measure is repeated at noon. Thus we have succeded in
keeping the laboratory air so clean that traces are detectable only in small
quantities, and we can continue working with our mercury apparatuses without
having to fear new health problems.
Whenever
one deals with mercury one should devote great care to the testing and
cleanliness of the air. One should check the airstream situation in the work
space9) and provide for as much fresh air as possible. It goes
without saying that all work with mercury, if at all possible, should be
performed under hoods10). That is the only way that protects from
damage with certainty. These precautions are necessary even if one has to
choose the path through the Scylla of mercury poisoning and the Charybdis of a
cold. A chemical removal of mercury cannot be obtained according to our
experiences. It had been suggested to distribute sulfur powder or zinc dust in
the work place. We also tried large foil flags that were hung in long rows from
the ceiling. Although tin foil amalgamates quickly if you put it into a closed
container next to mercury, it failed in this case: The mercury content in the
air did not lessen noticeably; one tin flag (33 X 100cm area; weighing 57g),
which had hung for 11 months over a mercury apparatus, was weighed afterwards.
It contained only .005 mg mercury.
The
recovery from insidious mercury poisoning, after the removal of the poison
source, takes place very slowly. Professor Lewin predicted this, and the
development of our wellbeing confirmed this. The time period is visibly
connected to the duration of the poisoning, and possibly also to how old you
are. My co-workers who had left the laboratory were, thankfully, rid of their
problems in the course of 1 - 2 years and have fully recovered the freshness of
their thinking ability and memory. Nevertheless, even they had to suffer for a
long time from relapses not only of mental but also of physical nature
(particularly mouth inflammation). Some assistants and female lab workers
continued to work here where they, unfortunately, cannot operate without
mercury. Even today, after two years, they are still suffering from clearly
visible, but steadily diminishing, after-effects of the poisoning. As for me,
who was exposed to the damaging influences for over 20 years, the recovery
apparently is taking the longest. All in all, I recovered the ability to work.
I had only occasional relapses (headaches, drowsiness and mild mouth
inflammation). Considering the course of the recovery up to now, I do not
doubt, however, that my last co-workers and I will lose our symptoms
completely. It seems that you have to count on it to take years to excrete the
mercury again that took years to build up in the body. In this regard the
following case has been educational to me recently, which at the same time
proves that it is irrelevant for the course of insidious mercury poisoning
whether the poison gets into the body via the lungs or through the skin.
A
medical assistant who had applied mercury salve therapy on his patients fell
ill in 1905 with those symptoms (moodiness, headache, vertigo), which gradually
got worse (fatigue, unbearable headache, oral inflammation, loosening and loss
of teeth, constant runny nose, sinusitis, sore throat, ringing in the ears,
hearing and vision disturbances). Only in 1911 was the situation recognized as
mercury poisoning. The man stopped applying the salve therapy, but still needed
many years before he lost his symptoms. After 1914, when he went to war he
suffered from headaches and drowsiness. Today as a fifty-five-year-old he is
again the picture of health and quite youthful.
It
seems that an existing mercury intoxication preconditions a special sensitivity
vis-a-vis renewed exposure from mercury vapor. Some of us who, at our work, and
also during occasional mistakes with ventilation, had come in contact again
with more mercury, noticed this soon because of the stronger symptomaology
after the relapses. That is not surprising because, as the long development
period of the insidious illness shows, a certain borderline value has to be reached
before noticeable symptoms appear. The borderline value is certainly exceeded
for a long time, even during recovery, so that each added amount of mercury
worsens your well being at once.
On
doctor's orders we tried to hasten the recovery in various ways through use of
diuretics and emetics, through hot baths and prolonged use of small amounts of
sodium iodide. I do not get the impression that healing was particularly
accelerated. The iodide has the reputation of bringing the metal into soluble
form from insoluble organic mercury compounds. This is the form in which the
mercury is probably anchored in the body. As far as I am concerned, there was
no proof that significantly more mercury was excreted after addition of iodide.
No progress was to be expected from diuretics, as already mentioned, since the
mercury excretion in the urine had stopped relatively soon altogether. The
healing arts are sadly lacking in medicines that detoxify mercury in the body 12).
Exercise
in fresh air is still best suited to make the subjective symptoms less
noticeable. With milder headaches and vertigo Novalgin has been proven
worthwhile as a palliative. All in all, it has to be left to time to become
master over this destroyer of peace. For me even a four-week long stay in the high
mountains and an ocean voyage to southerly latitudes brought hardly any
progress, (which normally occurs with unaffected people), although, naturally,
the mental relaxation helped the nerves.
Why
were our illnesses not recognized sooner as being mercury poisoning? I have
often asked myself this question, not without self-accusations. The first
signs, those that preceded the oral signs of slow mercury poisoning, are hardly
known by the medical profession.13) They consist only of fatigue,
lowering of thinking and memory skills, slight headaches and drowsiness and
rare occasional diarrhea. In the same way, it was little known until now that
the nose and remaining breathing passages are being compromised in the form of
a runny nose and sinusitis. But exactly these symptoms brought me and the
physicians who treated me on the wrong track, and have been misleading in other
cases that I have come to know about. Thus one of my assistants was treated for
a long time for a sinus infection before the true cause came to light. By the
way, balanced judgment of the bad situation becomes impaired in those who are
affected exactly because of the existing drowsiness: "Quem Mercurius
perdere vult, dementat prius!" [Whom Mercury wants to destroy, he first
robs of his mind!]
At
this time I would like to warn about a little known source of insidious mercury
poisoning: It is amalgam tooth fillings. Professor Lewin suggested to me at
once, when he noticed mercury poisoning in me, to replace all amalgam
fillings--of which I had a considerable number in my mouth since early
youth--with other fillings. Telling me this, he recalled a case of a university
colleague who was at the edge of mental and physical collapse when the cause
was found just in time. It was found in the numerous amalgam fillings stemming
from the time when he was young. After their removal slow recovery followed.14)
Dentists
used to prefer copper and cadmium amalgams and now often use the so-called
silver amalgams for tooth fillings because these amalgams are easy to work with
and fill out the cavities well. Silver amalgam is superior to the earlier named
amalgams, which corode and rot over time. However it, too, releases mercury at
room temperature as the following assays15) proved to us:
We
enclosed silver amalgam samples in an evacuated glass tube, which was bent [in
the middle] at a ninety-degree angle with the ends melted shut. The horizontal
tube shank with the amalgam piece was kept warm at 30-35 degrees C; the other
shank serving as a recepticle, was cooled with ice or liquid air. We then
measured the mercury that had sublimated in the receptacle in all cases.
- I. Amalgam piece carefully made for this purpose by
dentist in the state-of-the-art method from metal powder and mercury: .801
g. Enclosed by melting into glass tube 24 hours after manufacture. Warmed
[30-35 degrees] for 23 days. Receptacle in ice. Distilled mercury = 11.2
mg
- II. Same as above: .810 g. Kept for three weeks to make
hardening as complete as possible. Only
after that period of time was it enclosed by melting into glass tube.
Warmed [30-35 degrees] for 12 days. Receptacle in liquid air. Distilled mercury = 15.3 mg
- III. Amalgam piece made by taking care using as little
mercury as possible: 1.000 g. As in II. was kept in the open for three weeks.
Warmed [30-35 degrees] for 9 days. Receptacle in ice. Distilled mercury =
8.2 mg
- IV. Amalgam filling, which had been in a tooth for years and had fallen out: .894 g. Warmed [30-35 degrees] for 14 days. Receptacle in liquid air. Distilled mercury = 29.4 mg
Without
doubt, the fillings that were used here in the laboratory would have allowed
mercury to evaporate from the mouth as well and supplied the inhaled air with a
small amount of mercury, which, in the long run, has to be harmful. The old
copper and cadmium amalgams are likely to be even more harmful.
For
some time, one of my faculty colleagues had been suffering from occasional
headaches and drowsiness the cause of which he couldn't explain. After he had
an old amalgam filling removed, which had caused a slight infection near the
tooth in question, his symptoms disappeared gradually. After its removal the
filling showed itself as crumbly and laced with mercury droplets, throughout.
Dental
medicine should do without the application of amalgam as means for filling
teeth altogether or, at least, wherever at all possible. There is no doubt that
many complaints such as fatigue, memory weakness, oral inflammation, diarrhea,
lack of appetite, chronic runny nose and sinusitis are sometimes caused by
mercury that has been directed to the body from amalgam fillings, maybe only in
small quantities, but constantly. The physicians should give this fact the most
serious attention. Then it will probably become apparent that the frivolous
introduction of amalgams as tooth filling device was a nasty sin against
humanity.
Insidious
mercury poisonings are certainly much more common than ordinarily thought. This
is true particularly for chemists and physicists who so often have to work with
it. The great danger here is being noted much too little, and the true cause of
symptoms and illness is often not recognized. In literature you find almost
nothing about this.16) Since the discovery of our misfortune I have
found out about a dozen certain cases of insidious mercury poisoning, just in
the circle of my acquaintances. They almost always have the same symptoms.
Often the correct cause was missed and therefore the correct treatment was
missed as well. An important example is that of a foreign colleague who had
been working with mercury apparatus' for a long time. When he visited me and I
asked him whether he had ever felt any mercury poisoning, he decidedly said
that he had not. Upon further questioning about his health he then admitted:
"I am in bad shape. For years I have been suffering from neurasthenia and
had to stay away from the laboratory from time to time." The doctors had
tried all kinds of things with him. They had treated him for stomach,
intestinal, and ribcage disease with a special diet etc. In reality what he had
been dealing with was full-blown mercury poisoning without doubt.
One
unknowing victim of mercury poisoning has probably been Faraday. In the last
two to three decades of his life, which came to an end in his late seventies,
he was bothered increasingly by health problems, which made his scientific work
more and more difficult, and which played a significant role in his letters and
descriptions of his life. They were diagnosed by physicians as neurasthenia and
early onset arteriosclerosis. They consisted of, at times, strong mental and
physical fatigue, "irritable weakness," headaches, vertigo,
"rheumatism" and, more than anything else, constant increasing memory
loss.17)
Faraday,
being spared serious "bodily" illnesses, was even in old age a strong
hiker and swimmer. But he avoided people for the last third of his life.
Scientific work, including his lectures, were continued with long interruptions
into the last decade of his life. It is heart rending to read in the great
researcher's letters that he went to see his physician friend so often to
complain to him about vertigo and headache, that he couldn't remember names,
that he was losing the connections with his colleagues, that he was forgetting
his own work and notes, that he was forgetting his letter writing, and that he
didn't know any more how to write words. "The affected organ is my head.
The result is loss of memory and clarity and vertigo." All these symptoms
make it most likely that Faraday suffered from an insidious mercury poisoning
from the vapors used in the laboratory. It makes you shudder to think how, in
all likelihood, this rich intellect could have been freed from this suffering,
and what gifts he could have given to science if the cause of his illness could
have been recognized and remedied.
Maybe--Professor
Jaensch (Marburg) brings this to my attention--the mysterious sickness the
mathematician, physicist, and philosopher, Blaise Pascal (1623-1661), succumbed
to when he was still young was mercury poisoning. Pascal worked with mercury in
his well-known barometer research. His suffering from sustained headaches,
vertigo, toothache, loss of appetite, and lasting bad colic complete the
picture of advanced slow mercury poisoning.
No
doubt mercury, the use of which sadly cannot be done away with in research, has
done heavy damage to science in the past as it still does today in the way it
curtailed the output of many a researcher. May this present-day warning help us
pay better attention and avoid the dangers of this insidious metal.