Friday, 10 October 2014

Dangers of Meth lab

The risk from a chemical injury depends entirely on the chemical quantity, concentration and the length of chemical exposure. Anyone spending time in a formal meth lab may be at a huge health risk.

Acute exposure:
A chemical exposure which occurs for only a short period of time may result in health effects known as acute exposure. Slight exposure to this contamination can cause shortness of breath, dizziness, burns to the skin, eyes, nose and mouth, lack of coordination, cough, chemical irritation, chest pain and death, in severe cases. Other symptoms caused from meth lab exposure are nausea, fatigue and lethargy. These symptoms have been found in people who have entered a meth lab after the raid has occurred but before the lab has properly been cleaned or ventilated. Anyone spending a short time in such labs experiences these symptoms.

Corrosive effects:
Inhalation or skin exposure may cause severe injury to health from corrosive substances present in a meth lab. Such symptoms are chest pain, shortness of breath, burns to the skin and cough.

Solvents:
Exposure to meth lab solvents can cause irritation to the skin, mucous membranes, respiratory tract and cause central nervous system effects. They also cause severe skin burns.

Chronic exposure:
Chronic exposure appears over an extended period of time (weeks, months or years). Symptoms of Chronic exposure health effects are cancer, damage to the brain, liver and kidney, birth defects and reproductive disorders like miscarriages.

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