Nickel Salts.—Of late years in nickel-plating establishments an eczematous inflammation of the skin has been described affecting first of all the hands, and occasionally spreading over the arms and even the whole body. The skin becomes inflamed, and vesicles appear on the affected part. Some persons are extraordinarily susceptible to this disease, others only become so after having worked for years quite unaffected, and are then obliged to give up their occupation. Probably the action of nickel salts (especially nickel sulphate) used in electrolytic baths causes the disease. But it was in fact traced by several writers to contact with benzene, petroleum, and lime by the workmen. The simultaneous action of these substances upon the skin would no doubt encourage its appearance. The application to the skin of vaseline or cream is recommended. Careful cleanliness and attention to the skin is on the whole by far the most reliable protection.
[Nickel carbonyl (Ni(CO)₄).—Mond, Langer, and Quincke in 1890 discovered that, on passing a current of carbon monoxide over finely divided (pyrophoric) metallic nickel, a gaseous compound of nickel and carbon monoxide was formed. When heated to 150° C. the gas decomposes into its constituents and metallic nickel is deposited.
Nickel carbonyl is a clear, pale straw-coloured liquid, volatilising at room temperature. It has a peculiar soot-like smell detectable when present to the extent of about 1 vol. in 2,000,000, while the Bunsen flame becomes luminous when nickel carbonyl is present in the air to the extent of 1 vol. in 400,000—two facts of great importance in detecting escape of the gas in the manufacture of pure nickel by the Mond process.
Occurrence of poisoning by nickel carbonyl.—At the first introduction of the process about 1902, before the dangerous properties of the gas had been sufficiently recognised, some twenty-five men were poisoned, of whom three died. Poisoning only occurred when, as a result of the breakdown of the automatic working of the plant, hand labour took the place of machinery.
This very rare form of poisoning has been very fully investigated by H. W. Armit (Journ. of Hygiene, 1907, p. 526, and 1908, p. 565). The symptoms in man, he says, were transient headache and giddiness and at times dyspnœa, quickly passing off on removal to fresh air. After from twelve to thirty-six hours the dyspnœa returned, cyanosis appeared, and the temperature began to be raised. Cough with more or less blood-stained sputum appeared on the second day. The pulse rate became increased, but not in proportion to the respiratory rate. The heart remained normal. Delirium of varying types frequently occurred. Death took place in the fatal cases between the fourth and eleventh days. The chief changes found post mortem were hæmorrhages in the lungs, œdema of the lungs, and hæmorrhages in the white matter of the brain, while some doubt exists as to whether any blood changes were present.
Precisely analogous results were found in experiments on animals (rabbits, cats, and dogs).
The points Armit investigated experimentally were (1) Is the carbon monoxide of the compound wholly or partly responsible for the symptoms, or (2), is nickel carbonyl absorbed as such, or (3), is it the nickel of the compound which produces the symptoms? His conclusions are that the poisonous effects of nickel carbonyl are entirely due to the nickel of the compound. The peculiar toxicity is due to the fact that, being introduced in a gaseous form, the nickel is deposited as a slightly soluble compound in a very fine state of subdivision over the immense area of the respiratory surface. Nickel carbonyl when mixed with air cannot be absorbed as such by an animal as it becomes split up into the nickel containing substance (possibly hydrated basic carbonate of nickel) and carbon monoxide before or soon after reaching the alveoli of the lungs. The nickel is dissolved from the respiratory surface by the tissue fluids and is then taken up by the blood. The hæmorrhages found after death follow as the result of fatty degeneration of the vessel walls which is the specific pathological change set up by nickel.]
Copper.—Symptoms which have been described by some writers as chronic industrial copper poisoning are probably due to admixtures of other poisonous metals, especially lead and arsenic. Although some copper workers, especially those careless of cleanliness, exhibit hair and teeth coloured by the action of copper compounds (green tinge on hair and edge of teeth), symptoms of illness traceable to copper are not demonstrable.
Brass-founders’ fever, which by some earlier writers was ascribed to copper or combined copper and zinc action, is traceable to zinc (see Zinc).