Sudden and fatal poisoning occurs industrially. Upon entering places filled with carbonic acid gas the affected person falls down dead almost immediately. These are cases of asphyxia, in which the lack of oxygen certainly plays the greatest part. If those affected by acute carbonic acid poisoning are removed in time out of the dangerous atmosphere they usually recover quickly.
Oxygen inhalations and artificial respiration are to be applied in severer cases. There are no sequelæ.
GROUP: HYDROCARBONS OF THE ALIPHATIC AND AROMATIC SERIES AND THEIR HALOGEN AND HYDROXYL SUBSTITUTION PRODUCTS
The industrial poisons comprised in this group have as their principal general effect injurious action upon the functions of the central nervous system (paralysis or causing excitation) which is prominent in most of the cases of industrial poisoning caused by these substances. This effect is most marked in the case of the readily volatile (low boiling) hydrocarbons, while those less volatile and boiling at a higher temperature often have collateral effects (such as local irritation). The characteristic poisonous effect caused by the chlorine and hydroxyl-substitution products (chloroform and alcohol group) is also mainly on the central nervous system (narcosis).
HYDROCARBONS OF MINERAL OIL
BENZINE, LIGROINE, PETROLEUM, PARAFFIN, VASELINE
Mineral oil (crude petroleum) has, according to its origin, differing composition. Thus in American mineral oil hydrocarbons of the methane series preponderate; in the Russian, hydrocarbons of the aromatic series. Reference has been made in Part I. to this point, as well as to the separation of crude petroleum into its different fractions.
The injury to health produced by crude petroleum and its derivatives is of two kinds. Direct contact with liquid petroleum and the semi-liquid and solid deposit after distillation (paraffin) cause local injury to the skin. Inhalation of the volatile constituents of raw petroleum causes symptoms affecting mainly the central nervous system. They have moreover a markedly irritating effect upon the mucous membrane of the respiratory organs. These substances clearly exhibit the characteristic we have referred to, namely, that the hydrocarbons boiling at low temperature act as nerve poisons, whereas those boiling at a higher temperature produce a local irritant effect.
The skin affections take the form of inflammation of the hair follicles (acne), eruptions with characteristic formation of vesicles, and pimples and pustules which precede the deep-seated formation of ulcers, abscesses, &c.
In paraffin workers the acne-like skin inflammations are known as ‘paraffin eczema.’ They develop sometimes into cancer of the skin (warty and epitheliomatous growths).