II. Background
- Organosulfur gas that is colorless, but has a putrid odor, and is highly toxic when concentrated (industrial use)
- Naturally occurring
- Found in natural gas, Coal Tar, decaying material in marshes, and sea algae breakdown products
- Occurs in mammal feces (contributes to the foul odor)
- Industry
- Production of plastics, Pesticides, jet fuel and farm feed
- By product in wood pulp processing
- Toxicity
- Blocks Electron Transport Chain
- Primary toxicity is via inhation
- Other exposures include skin contact and mucosal irritation
- Exposure Levels
- Odor present: 0.002 ppm
- Permissible exposure level: 10 ppm
- Human health hazard level: 150 ppm
III. Adverse Effects
- Respiratory
- Cough
- Respiratory distress
- Apnea (severe cases)
- Cardiac
- Gastrointestinal
- Neurologic
IV. Labs
V. Imaging
VI. Management
- Move patient to fresh air
- Decontamination (remove contaminated clothing, wash skin)
- Eye Irrigation for 15 minutes (if contact exposure)
- Treat bronchospasm (e.g. Nebulized Albuterol)
- Seizure Management (start with Benzodiazepines)
- Antidotes
- Consider hydroxycobalamin 5 g IV
VII. Resources
- Methanethiol (Wikipedia)
- Methanethiol (PubChem)
VIII. References
- Tomaszewski (2020) Crit Dec Emerg Med 34(12): 28