Our Mold Infested Home!

December 1, 2008 by Angela  
Filed under Family Life, Featured, Lifestyle

Two weeks ago we had our home tested for mold by a Mold Specialist because I am highly allergic to certain types of mold which can trigger my auto-immune disorder. When my system is triggered, I suffer irreversible hair loss as well as neurological problems. We knew we had mold even though it wasn’t detectable by smell, because I started suffering again with hair loss and tremors as well as going numb and not being able to move sometimes. My husband goes ripping through the house like a mad man looking for hidden mold and he found the mother load! Mold was colonizing in the air conditioner/furnace room. We just got the air conditioner fixed because it crapped out on us one very hot day this past July. After having it fixed we didn’t realize that condensation was building once again and mold was forming. This happened last year as well and we had to have the walls and carpet ripped out and replaced.

At most, I thought the mold problem was isolated to me alone, but there was a series of events that have caused us to go back and recount the illnesses not only of my husband and children, but to my grand daughter as well.

My grand daughter in is only 17 months old and has a long list of medical problems which involve her development, neurological system, gastrointestinal system and her skin. She still can not speak or say any words. There is a lot more to her story which I will save for another time. But for now, knowing the amounts of mold we have as well as the concentration levels may hold the key to her many medical problems.

Here is a list of the molds present in our home:

  1. Agrocybe/Coprinus
  2. Alternaria
  3. Ascospores
  4. Aspergillus/Penicillium (the highest percentage of 65%)
  5. Basidiospores
  6. Chaetomium
  7. Cladosporium
  8. Epicoccum
  9. Stachybotrys (black toxic mold)
  10. Pithomyces

I am allergic to five on this list, but what is most concerning to us is the high concentration of Aspergillus, Cladosporium, Chaetomium and also the toxic black mold. Stachybotrys (toxic mold) does not usually become airborne. It colonizes where it is (non-airborne) unless it is disturbed or dried out, then the spores shoot into the air, contaminating everything it lands on. My husband is highly allergic to Aspergillus/Penicillium, which explains the hair loss on his head, in his eyebrows and his chest hair. He also has other health concerns that he just chalked up to being achy from work. Now we have cause to reconsider.

Stachybotrys can be safely removed by a mold remediation specialist IF it is intact and has not become airborne, but once it does become airborne, according to a few specialists “It’s all over!” The mold specialist who took the air samples of our home said that in all the time that he has tested different sites, he has NEVER seen such high amounts of Stachybotrys airborne!

So what does it all mean for our family? Since we already knew there was mold I was allergic to in our current home, we had planned to give away or sell our things because only I was allergic to it and then move out west to New Mexico with just our clothing. But since we just found out today that we have toxic mold, we have to throw EVERYTHING away! That’s right, everything, including our clothes. Nothing can go with us, or given to relatives for storage, or sold, because of the contamination. If the toxic mold was not airborne, in theory could take our stuff, but it still poses a threat to our health because of the nine other molds and we run the risk of contaminating a new home, starting the process all over again. It’s like losing everything in a fire. All the things I held precious, like my father’s original artwork, my art that I held onto since I was nine years old, all my children’s art, photographs, important documents, books that I treasure, things I have made my children…all gone. We have to start all over.

The following is a list of symptoms related to toxic mold, and the information I list is from http://www.mold-survivor.com/symptoms.html

  • Fibromyalgia/mps (and several correlated symptoms)
  • Respiratory distress, coughing, sneezing, sinusitis
  • Difficulty swallowing, choking, spitting up (vomiting) mucous
  • Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
  • Burning in the throat and lungs (similar to acid reflux and often misdiagnosed as such)
  • Asthmatic signs; wheezing, shortness in breath, coughing, burning in lungs, etc.
  • Irritable bowel syndrome, nausea, diarrhea, sharp abdominal pains, stomach lesions
  • Bladder, liver, spleen, or kidney pain

  • Dark or painful urine
  • Dirt-like taste in mouth, coated tongue
  • Food allergies/leaky gut syndrome/altered immunity
  • Memory loss; brain fog, slurred speech, occasionally leading to dementia
  • Vision problems
  • Swollen lymph nodes
  • Large boils on neck (often a sign of
  • anaphylaxis)

  • Yellowing of nails, ridges, or white marks under nail
  • Thyroid irregularities, sometimes leading to complete dysfunction; adrenal problems
  • Headaches
  • Anxiety/depression, heart palpitations - confusion,
  • PTSD

  • Extreme blood pressure, cholesterol, or triglycerides irregularities
  • Ringing in ears, balance problems (very common), dizziness, loss of hearing (aspergillus niger)
  • Chronic fatigue (also included under this classification directional confusion)
  • Intermittent face flushing; almost always systemic, Called the Mylar Flush (neurological))
  • Night head sweats, and drooling while sleeping, profuse sweating
  • Multiple chemical sensitivity; only upon exposure to Stachybotrys and Chaetomium
  • Nose bleeds (stachybotrys)

  • Bruising/scarring easily; rash or hives, bloody lesions all over the skin (Often systemic, see images; skin)

  • Reproductive system complications; infertility, changes in menstrual cycles, miscarriage
  • Sudden weight changes (Detoxifier genotypes tend to gain weight, non-detoxifier genotypes tend to lose weight)
  • Cancer
  • Hair loss, very brittle nails, temporary loss of fingerprints (in rare cases)
  • Joint/muscle stiffness and pain
  • Irregular heart beat/heart attack
  • Seizures, inadvertent body jerking, twitching, inadvertent facial movements or numbness in face
  • Hypersensitivity when re-exposed to molds, which can lead to anaphylaxis
  • Anaphylaxis upon re-exposure to mycotoxin producing molds
  • Death, in extreme cases

This was incredibly long, but I feel it is so important not to mess with mold. If you feel your home has mold problems, please get it checked out.

Here are some helpful links about mold and mold exposure:

http://www.mold-help.org/

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Comments

5 Comments on "Our Mold Infested Home!"

  1. Avis on Tue, 2nd Dec 2008 11:00 am 

    Oh Angela. I am so sorry that this continues to happen to you and your family. I can imagine how much you hate to lose all those treasured things from your past. This is easy for me to say becasue I’m not walking in your shoes, but I’ll say it anyway. Thank God you found out about the mold now, so that you didn’t contaminate your new home with it. Thank God you are able to move to a new home where you and your family can make wonderful new memories. Thank you for sharing.

  2. amber taylor on Mon, 26th Jan 2009 3:54 pm 

    hello, recently my elderly grandmother came to live with me. She strangly has memory loss, weight loss, problems swallowing, joint pain, recent thyroid trouble, and loss of blood( they have no idea where she is losing blood). She has so many of those symtoms. The house she was living in she has been there her whole life. But last year she started to remodel her bathroom, which was in pretty bad condition. Something went wrong and the workers never finished her bathroom and left the floor uncovered where it had been leaking. Her house smells srtonly of mold. Im im starting to think she may be experiencing the same thing. I am unsure of how you get you rhome tested, but if you have anymore information that would be helpful.

  3. Angela on Mon, 26th Jan 2009 8:13 pm 

    Hi Amber,
    You can search for mold specialists and remediators in your area. There are mold “specialists” that capitalize on fear and they know that there is a lot of money to be made in scaring people, but there are also specialists that are balanced in their approach and will do their best to find the mold without all the scare tactics.
    Since moving out of our house in Maryland, someone with whom we are in touch with has told us that the land lord of our previous house gutted the whole house right down to the frame, had the house professionally remediated and when the specialist came back the numbers were just as high as the first time they took the air samples. It turns out that they only gutted our house and not the tenants apartment that was attached to our house! The specialist entered the tenants home and found black mold growing up the walls. The first time around they never checked the apartment because we were paying for all the tests. I can’t imagine what our former land lord must be feeling at this time knowing that the source of the mold was actually coming from the other tenant’s basement! Needless to say the house is uninhabitable and it can not be rented out to anyone until they are either able to properly get rid of the mold or they knock it down and build a new one in its place. The other people that lived in the apartment suffered from many health issues as well and yet they are STILL living there. I don’t quite understand how or why people would choose to continue to put their health and lives at risk.

    Hopefully your grandmother will begin to make a recovery if in fact she is affected by mold. Proving mold is a source of physical or mental problems is very hard to do. You can have the air tested in her home and if large concentrations of a particular mold is found, you can also have her blood tested to see if the DNA of the mold is traceable within her body. That would be the only way to know for sure.
    Keep me posted on how your grand mother is doing.

  4. dragonflymcs on Wed, 9th Sep 2009 6:29 pm 

    I am sorry about what has happened to you and yours. We had a similar fate. I have Hypersensitivity Pnuemonitis from mold and several other conditions. My partners brain no longer goes into REM sleep. Our damage is permanent. We have yet to find safety since 2004. We had many of the same molds you had present in your home. I wish you all well and may you and yours find safety and your health be restored.

  5. Cheryl on Tue, 20th Jul 2010 12:38 pm 

    My God, this is just heart breaking to me. I am currently smack dab in the middle of the exact situation. This has been going on for a year now and the landlord continues to go in, start ripping out drywall, insulation, etc. and “ruffles” up the stachybotris, Aspergillus/Penicillium, Alternaria, Chaetomium, Fusarium, Cladosporium, Ascospores, Basidiospores, etc. I too have suffered for 9 months now with everything from pneumonia, swollen vocal cords, face and limb paralysis, eye problems, vertigo, dizziness, tachycardia, numerous infections including teeth and jaw, bloody noses, black stool, severe stomach pains, anxiety and panic attacks, etc. - the list goes on and on! Last weekend I finally decided to give up and move as I have been paying $725 a month for rent in a place that I haven’t been able to live for over a month. Every time I go there just to get clothes and stuff for me and the kids I become so horribly ill. I can’t seem to get anyone in the medical community to listen to me despite the fact that I have tons of documentation including samples taken both before and after the landlord’s “remediation” which consisted of spraying anti-mold spray OVERTOP of the mold (he never REMOVED the existing mold). Three days ago a friend and I went in and tried to decide what to save and what had to go. I rented a storage unit and moved things into it like tv’s, computers, bed frames, wood furniture, and clothes with the intent of taking the rest of the stuff (mattresses, pillows, comfortors, etc.) to the dump. HOWEVER, after reading your story, I’m now scared to death to keep anything! There is no doubt in my mind that the toxic molds became airborn and infected everything, even traveling upstairs to my living room/kitchen area. The thought of throwing everything way is so overwhelming.

    Thank you so much for posting this though, it does confirm what I think I already knew in my mind but was afraid to face, which is that everything has to be discarded. So so sad.

    Cheryl

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