HYDROXYL SUBSTITUTION PRODUCTS
FATTY SERIES (ALCOHOLS)

The hydroxyl substitution products of the fatty series belong mainly to the narcotic poisons; the greater the molecular weight of the alcohol, the more marked is usually the narcotic effect. According to this propylalcohol is eighteen times as poisonous as ethylalcohol; butylalcohol and amylalcohol have from 36 to 120 times as great a narcotic effect as methylalcohol.

Methylalcohol (wood spirit, CH₃OH) plays relatively the greatest part among alcohols as an industrial poison, because it is employed as a means of denaturing spirit. Its poisonous nature is relatively great, being very persistent. Industrial poisoning by methylalcohol is due to inhalation of the vapour and is rarely of a severe nature. The fumes have a strongly irritant effect upon the mucous membrane, giving rise to throat irritation, cough, hoarseness, and in severe cases bronchitis and inflammation of the conjunctiva of the eye. In addition inhalation of methylalcohol vapour causes headache, giddiness, nausea (inclination to vomit), and occasionally also twitchings and tremor.

The higher alcohols (propyl-, butyl-, amyl-alcohol, C₃H₇.OH, C₄H₉.OH, and C₅H₁₁.OH) occur in fusel oil. They cause but slight (if any) industrial poisoning. Cases of more severe industrial poisoning through amylalcohol fumes have been described (in factories for smokeless powder), with symptoms of sickness, headache, giddiness, with fatal issue in some cases, preceded by severe nervous symptoms (convulsions or delirium).

Beyond speedy removal out of the dangerous atmosphere, probably no special treatment is needed in these cases of industrial poisoning from alcoholic vapour.

GROUP: NITRO AND AMIDO COMPOUNDS OF THE ALIPHATIC AND AROMATIC SERIES (BLOOD POISONS WHICH FORM METHÆMOGLOBIN)

Characteristic of the nitro and amido compounds of the aliphatic and aromatic series of the organic substances is their action upon the blood. The normal oxyhæmoglobin (blood-colouring matter) is changed into methæmoglobin, with which the oxygen is so firmly combined that the internal exchange of gases necessary to life becomes impossible. Methæmoglobin has a dark chocolate-brown colour and a clearly defined characteristic spectrum.

Of the poisons belonging to this group several are important. In so far as these substances are volatile—and this is generally the case with those causing industrial poisoning—effects are due to inhalation of fumes, but it is proved that the poisons of this group in liquid form can be absorbed by the intact skin, and this channel of absorption is characteristic of industrial poisoning. Severe poisoning results especially from wetting the skin by spilling on the clothes, &c.

The grey-blue discoloration of the mucous membrane, especially of the lips, is characteristic; sometimes also the skin is altered in colour. This discoloration is often noticed by others before the patient feels unwell. Soon the person affected has general nausea, vomiting, headache, giddiness, severe nervous symptoms, feeling of anxiety, and difficulty of breathing; in severe cases unconsciousness comes on, and death occurs with increasing cyanosis (lividity).