Elusive Upstate New York Illness May be Fading

After weeks of speculation as to the cause of the mysterious condition spreading throughout a high school in LeRoy, doctors finally have some good news- at least two of the affected girls are recovering.  According to Dr. Jennifer McVigh of Dent Neurologic Institute, there are also three more girls who seem to be improving as well.

The girls had been receiving a combination of medication and behavioral and psychological treatment.  Dr. McVigh also attributed the fading attention from the national media as a factor contributing to the girls’ recovery.

Despite this, environmental investigations are ongoing.  Both the EPA and Erin Brockovich are continuing to investigate potential environmental concerns.  The EPA plans to remove barrels leftover from the 1970 train derailment, even though there is no conclusive evidence linking them to the girls’ conditions.  Erin Brockovich’s team also has yet to discover any links between environmental causes and the schoolgirls.

For more information on this story, please click here.

Mystery Air Particles May Cause Harm to Your Health

According to the New York Times, approximately 50,000 Americans die each year from heart and lung disease,  triggered by particles smaller than one thirtieth of the diameter of a human hair.

These particles were discovered about twenty years ago.  However recent scientific studies have uncovered a subset of these particles, known as secondary organic aerosols.  According to the results, the particles are actually more dangerous than we thought.  Secondary organic aerosols are slightly larger and consequently more harmful than their predecessors.  These compounds are formed as a result of the interactions between pollutants and natural chemical compounds.

According to Bill Becker of the National Association of Clean Air Agencies, if the authors’ analysis is correct, the public is not facing a false sense of security in knowing whether the air they breathe is indeed safe.”

Essentially what this means is that prior governmental pollution control efforts have only been aimed at a part of the problem, and new measures need to be implemented soon.  The EPA recently announced that it is in the process of reassessing the national standards for fine particulates in ambient air quality.  The regulations were last updated in 2006 and have been successful in lowering the amount of airborne fine particulates by twenty-seven percent.

For the full story, please click here to read the article on the New York Times’ website.

Lead in Your Lipstick?

In 2007, the FDA received complaints stemming from a report published by the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics.  The report raised concerns regarding the lead content in a variety of brands of lipstick sold in the United States.  In response, the FDA tested approximately four hundred brands.  Having done so, the FDA confirmed that while many brands did contain trace amounts of lead, no brand contained unsafe amounts of it. The study measured lead content against California’s standards, which are known to be the strictest in the country.  (California’s standards limit lead content to 5 parts-per-million.)

Then in December 2011, the FDA quietly updated its results.  This time, the new data revealed that some lipsticks did contain lead quantities that were higher than California’s standards.  Maybelline Color Sensation, manufactured by L’Oreal USA, was found to have the highest lead content at 7.19 ppm, and another L’Oreal brand had lead contents of 7.0 ppm.  Ironically, the cheapest lipstick, Wet & Wild Mega Mixers Lip Balm, contained the lowest levels in the study.

However, officials say that the are not as frightening as they may seem.  It is important to note that lead is not an official ingredient in lipstick, but rather an impurity.

Furthermore, lead is ingested in trace amounts every day. EPA standards for the lead content in drinking water is 15 parts-per-billion, and people ingest far more water than lipstick.

Still though, lead can have serious effects, both on adults and children.  Therefore, the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics (CFC) is asking the FDA to take action in light of its new findings.  In a letter to the FDA, the CFC noted, “lead builds up in the body over time and lead-containing lipstick applied several times a day, every day, can add up to significant exposure levels.”

If you are interested in learning about how your brand of lipstick fared in the study, you can see the results here.

If you believe that you or a loved one is suffering from lead poisoning, please contact our office.  We will provide you with a complementary consultation concerning your legal rights.

To learn more about lead poisoning in lipstick, click here.

Mystery Condition Strikes Upstate New York Schoolgirls

Last fall, a number of teenage girls at LeRoy High School in upstate New York began exhibiting Tourette’s-like symptoms.  The symptoms all began very suddenly.  Students reporting waking up and suddenly experiencing both physical and verbal tics.  Since the initial report, there are now a total of thirteen to fourteen students who have reported experiencing the same symptoms.  All students affected are female, with the exception of one male.  One of the victims posted a video on YouTube, showing her symptoms. You can view that video here.

Predictably, theories attempting to explain the cause of this mysterious outbreak are surfacing from experts in a variety of fields.  Even Erin Brockovitch has launched an investigation.  Brockovitch’s current theory is that the damage has been caused by a train derailment that dumped cyanide and an industrial solvent in the area in 1970.  LeRoy High School, on the other hand, announced in a press release that it has hired its own environmental experts, and no abnormalities around the school have been uncovered.  On Saturday, Brockovitch and her team were turned away from the area, as the school indicated the investigation was interfering with the school’s daily activities.  Kim Cox, the Superintendent, explained,

…we have been working closely for months with numerous medical professionals, the New York State Department of Health, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency. All of these agencies and professionals from these agencies have assured us that our school is safe.  There is no evidence of an environmental or infectious cause.

The doctors treated the affected students are in agreement that environmental factors can be ruled out.  In an interview with MSNBC, Dr. Gregory Young of the New York Department of Health agreed.  Dr. Laszlo Mechtler, a neurologist at the DENT Neurologic Institute in Amherst, New York, has treated several of the girls.  His diagnosis is not Tourette’s, but rather a conversion disorder, known more commonly as mass hysteria.

According to Mechtler, mass hysteria is a condition that, at the present time, cannot be fully explained.  Doctors believe that the condition is caused by a physical manifestation of psychological symptoms.  Symptoms associated with mass hysteria include seizures, tingling, numbness, paralysis, and inability to speak.  For a reason that cannot be explained, women seem to suffer from mass hysteria much more frequently than men.

According to the Huffington Post, this is not at all the first instance of mass hysteria ever to occur.  In fact, most of us are probably more familiar with the phenomenon than we thought.  The Salem Witch trials began after several girls began experiencing mysterious outbursts.  Again in Salem, the vast majority of people affected were women.  The significant gender imbalance is a clue that doctors have used to distinguish between poisoning and hysteria.

A similar outbreak was reported in 1789 in a Northern English textile factory.  The Huffington Post reports that the outbreak began with one woman experiencing convulsions after another woman hid a mouse in the first woman’s dress.  A rumor then spread that the convulsions had instead been caused by an imported bag of cotton.  Before long, twenty-one women, two young girls, and one man, all experienced violent convulsions as well.  The factory was forced to shut down to put a stop to the epidemic.  Those treating the patients determined that the victims were “merely nervous.”  Rather than writing prescriptions for medication, victims were instead encouraged to attend a dance.  The next day, victims were remarkably better and able to return to work.

Similar outbreaks have also been noted in a North Carolina school in 2004 and in schools in Taiwan in 2009 and 2010.

For more information on this story, please see any of the following sites below:

If you or a loved one have been injured by a toxic substance, please contact our firm.  We will provide you with a complementary consultation concerning your legal rights.

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