|
|
|
| http://www.epi.state.nc.us/epi/hab/bluegreen.html
|
|
Blue-Green Algae and Human Health |
Prepared by Thomas Morris, M.D., M.P.H.
Medical Epidemiologist
N.C. Harmful Algal Blooms Program
Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology Branch
December 2000
|
Executive Summary:
|
Cyanobacteria (blue-green
algae) are ubiquitous around the world. Blooms of
blue-green algae seem to be commonplace in North Carolina.
The toxins produced by selected species of cyanobacteria
are secondary metabolites of the algae and fall into
three general categories: neurotoxic, hepatotoxic
and non-specific (mostly cytotoxic effects). Cyanobacteria
also have lipopolysaccharides (LPS, similar to compounds
found in the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria
such as Escherichia coli) which are potent mediators
in the mammalian immune system. Mortality from cyanobacteria
is mostly confined to veterinary reports in pets and
livestock that have drunk water densely packed with
algae. Adverse human health effects associated with
cyanobacteria are rare in the medical literature:
these are mostly anecdotal case reports and are often
circumstantial (e.g., no other cause was found for
these effects); in some instances neither the algae
nor the toxin(s) are identified. No human deaths from
cyanobacteria have been reported in the United States.
Ingestion and immersion are the primary routes of
ill-health effects from toxic metabolites of cyanobacteria.
Exposure to airborne components of algae can result
in irritant and allergic symptoms and are likely mediated
by non-toxic cellular components of the algae. The
mouse bioassay is the established method to determine
presence of toxic substrates in algae, and there are
numerous laboratory methods for elucidating chemical
structures from algae-tainted water. Field testing
kits for toxins are not yet available. |
Ecology of Cyanobacteria:
|
Cyanobacteria are found worldwide in both marine and
freshwater habitats. (It should be noted that not
all cyanobacteria are blue-green in color-some in
these genera can range from green to red to brown.
In this memorandum, cyanobacteria and 'blue-green'
are considered interchangeable terms.) There are more
than 50 genera of freshwater blue-green algae, and
about one-third of them have been identified with
toxin production. Blue-green algae in small numbers
are a natural part of the water system. In large numbers,
the algae spoil the water because of malodor and form
thick scum on the water (increasing the viscosity
and composition), and as a result cause the water
to be distasteful. Decaying algae consume oxygen in
the water, so fish may die as a result of oxygen deprivation.
Also, a dense algal bloom floating on the surface
may potentially alter the benthic community underneath
by shading it from the sun and altering the community's
ecological system.
|
While eutrophication of surface water from industrial
and agricultural activities has been cited as the
stimuli for blooms, the causes are more complex. Nutrient
loading in the water is not the sole reason for blooms
to occur. Although much is still to be learned about
the ecology of cyanobacteria and their interaction
with the aquatic environment, known factors in excessive
algal blooms include:
|
• Runoff into waterways with nutrients
(nitrogen and phosphorus) from sewage, agriculture
fertilizers, industrial effluent, etc
|
• Poor water flow-blooms generally do not
occur in steadily moving water.
|
• Alteration of lake and river ecosystems
through land clearing, agriculture and settlement,
and water management systems (locks, dams, etc.).
|
Adverse events, toxins, and other problems: |
For this discussion, 'toxic' refers to a systemic
effect that is non-discriminatory; 'irritant' is a
local physical effect (such as skin inflammation after
contact; any reference to 'allergy' emphasizes the
interaction of host (humans) and environmental stimulus
(in this document, algae and their constituent products).
Some people are hypersensitive (have an exaggerated
immune response) to such stimuli while others are
not. Asthma, also referred in the medical literature
as 'reactive airway disease,' is an example.
|
Not all cyanobacteria produce toxins, and even those
known to produce toxins are not always producing the
compounds shown to be toxic. Common genera of cyanobacteria
associated with toxic metabolites include Microcystis,
Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, and Oscillatoria; others
to consider are Cylindrospermopsis and Lyngbya. The
toxic chemical compounds are considered secondary
metabolites, e.g., they are not essential for the
cell to live. In addition, the 'toxicity' must be
carefully defined: is the organism toxic to other
aquatic bacteria, to fish, to birds and mammals, and/or
to humans? Toxicity for other aquatic life forms,
such as fish or bacteria, is not a good predictor
of human health risk (many different fish, for example,
are tolerant of cyanobacterial toxins). A fish kill
does not necessarily point to toxic algal activity.
Algal blooms may deplete dissolved oxygen in the water,
resulting in fish kills. The algae also increase the
viscosity of water, which may impede water flow over
a fish's gills, hindering gas exchange and causing
suffocation.
|
Various toxins have different effects on different
organisms. The known cyanobacterial toxins are listed
in the general categories of hepatotoxins, neurotoxins
and non-specific toxins. A fourth category is not
really a secondary metabolite but a component of the
algal cell wall; the component is called lipopolysaccharide
(LPS) and is similar to the LPS identified in Gram-negative
bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Salmonella sp.
Hepatotoxins can cause liver failure. Neurotoxins
disrupt electrical transmissions vital to nerve and
brain function. The toxin of Cylindrospermopsis is
considered a cytotoxin (poisonous to most cells);
its sites of action are non-specific. Most of the
knowledge about the toxicity of these compounds, including
dose-response interactions, comes from animal experiments.
Because of the rarity of proven human exposure and
resulting toxicity from direct algal exposure, there
is no dose-response data or even experimental data
in humans. In fact, most of the studies in which an
algal bloom was blamed for toxic effects typically
did not identify the algae present or the toxin(s)
implicated, or both. The evidence was circumstantial,
as investigations sought but did not find other established
causes. The compounds implicated in taste and odor
problems associated with cyanobacteria, such as geosmin,
in and of themselves are not thought to pose a health
risk to humans. It is important to note that cyanobacteria
do not actively excrete the toxic compounds but that
the toxins are released into the aquatic environment
as a result of cell lysis (breaking apart of the cell
and its death). This has particular ramifications
for management of a bloom in that applying an algacidal
agent such as copper sulfate may worsen water quality
for consumption and use, since the toxins are released
into the water as the algal cells die. There are data
to suggest that neurotoxins degrade rapidly in the
environment, but the hepatotoxic microcystins may
persist for an indeterminate time.
|
Health effects in humans are seldom seen from blue-green
algae, although reports of illness in animals are
slightly more frequent. Medical literature concerning
direct contact with algae is sparse and located mostly
in non-U.S. medical publications. In countries around
the world and in some parts of the U.S., deaths have
been reported in animals (particularly pets and cattle)
that drank water containing high levels of cyanobacteria,
particularly in drought conditions when stagnant,
contaminated water was the animals' only water source.
|
The toxins of freshwater cyanobacteria do not appear
to bioaccumulate in fish and other edible freshwater
aquatic life, as they do in marine (e.g., saltwater)
organisms. This is not to say it does not occur, but
unlike in seafood and shellfish harvested from brackish
and saltwater habitats, toxic events from consumption
of freshwater animals have not been documented or
proven. By far the most prevalent adverse human health
events related to algae are poisonings from consuming
tainted seafood such as marine clams, oysters, and
predatory fish, which can concentrate these algal
toxins from many sources through bioaccumulation.
The marine life itself throughout the food chain can
be unaffected by the toxic byproducts of algae, such
as the brevetoxin (a neurotoxin) associated with Gymnodinium
breve, the red-tide marine alga.
|
Cyanobacteria toxins and human health: |
There have been no confirmed reports in North Carolina
of human illnesses or deaths attributable to blue-green
algae, and less than a handful of possible animal
deaths associated with blue-green algae in this state
(only two events involving animals have been documented
since the N.C. Division of Water Quality began investigating
algal blooms in 1984). Human and animal exposures
to toxic metabolites occur from direct contact with
algal bloom-encrusted water or its downstream effluent.
The routes of exposure are ingestion and/or immersion
in affected water.
|
Cyanobacteria are thought to cause a wide range of
symptoms in humans. Probably the most notable symptom
and sign is abdominal pain with nausea, vomiting and
diarrhea (epidemic gastroenteritis). Dermatologic
problems (e.g., rash) and eye irritations can also
occur, but there is nothing characteristic about the
eruption and the literature does not discuss whether
the cause is a mechanical irritation or an allergic
reaction to toxic metabolites or algal components.
Contact dermatitis from algae may likely appear similar
to contact with poison ivy; the skin reaction may
be more an exaggerated immune response to irritant
properties of algal components and not necessarily
indicative of its toxic potential. There is some evidence
and case reports of adverse human health effects from
the aerosolization of algal products. Intact algae
have been identified and cultured in house dust and
may be a factor in respiratory allergy. However, it
should be noted that this phenomenon is not necessarily
evidence that the algae are actually producing toxins;
instead algal products may trigger a reaction in persons
hypersensitive to environmental stimuli. There have
been comparative studies of skin testing in patients
with allergic (hayfever-like) symptoms and raised
serum IgE levels. Algae, like many other environmental
allergens such as dust, mold, and animal dander, may
trigger severe allergic symptoms in people with allergies.
|
In a 1999 report by Ahluwalia, Microcystis aeruginosa
was a causative agent for rhinosporidiosis (polyps
in the nasal cavity). To date, this is the only example
of invasive disease by a cyanobacterium. The transmitting
agent is considered a nanocyte that free-floats in
ostensibly clean water. In the paper, however, nothing
was said about whether exposure came from outdoor
swimming or contact with an algal bloom. In another
instance, from a 1990 report by Turner, et al., two
military recruits participated in canoeing exercises
that implied immersion in water (water was swallowed)
in which a mass of Microcystis aeruginosa was present.
They subsequently had sore throats, abdominal pain
with diarrhea, dry cough, blistering around the mouth,
and malaise. All symptoms resolved within one week.
In the investigation, it was noted that the water
had unsuitably high counts of E. coli, but did not
contain detectable levels of enteroviridae (a cause
of hand, foot, and mouth disease which may have mimicked
the mouth blisters).
|
The most dramatic documented event of human fatality
from cyanobacterial toxins occurred in February 1996.
Sixty patients with kidney failure died and 66 others
were rendered ill in a hemodialysis clinic in Caruaru,
Brazil, when untreated turbid water contaminated with
an unspecified type of cyanobacteria was used for
dialysis during a water shortage. The causative toxic
agent was microcystin, a hepatotoxin. The morbidity
and mortality occurred from the use of partially treated
water in the dialysis procedure, which resulted in
each patient's bloodstream being directly exposed
to approximately 125 L of contaminated water. This
breakdown in the system occurred because untreated
water from the water source was trucked in, bypassing
the local water treatment facility. A nearby hemodialysis
clinic that was still on treated water from the same
water source was unaffected. The predominant algae
were never identified, and interestingly, there were
no reports of similar human illness or animal effects
from other exposures to the same water source. This
is a unique circumstance in that this was not an environmental
exposure. This is also the only instance where toxin
exposure with human health effects was considered
causal rather than circumstantial, as microcystins
were detected in the source water, dialysate and the
patients.
|
In some investigations the algae are implicated by
circumstance, when 'the usual suspects,' e.g., bacteria,
viruses and/or parasites, are not found. To illustrate:
a large epidemic in Brazil involving human deaths
occurred in 1988-over 2,000 residents suffered from
gastroenteritis over an 8-week period, with 88 deaths.
An epidemiologic investigation implicated drinking
water from a reservoir, even water that had been boiled
before use. Infectious agents, metals or toxins were
not found; however, the cyanobacterium genera Anabaena
and Microcystis were found in great quantities in
untreated water from the reservoir. Algal toxins were
not assayed, but the circumstantial evidence strongly
implicated the cyanobacteria as the cause.
|
In addition to the direct effects of exposure to microcystins,
there is some observational evidence that microcystins
may also be promoters of carcinogenesis. At present
the data are weak with strong confounders (for example,
aflatoxins and hepatitis B virus have carcinogenic
potential) and no human cases have been found; however,
this may be of long-term concern.
|
It should be noted that the cyanobacterial genus Spirulina
is sold as a dietary supplement in U.S. markets, ostensibly
as a diet aid. While Spirulina has not been implicated
as a toxin-producing blue-green alga, the full understanding
of if, how and when cyanobacteria are able to produce
toxic compounds is far from complete. Of more compelling
concern is that there is no standard for the harvesting
of blue-green algae, and Spirulina may be confused
for or contaminated with a known toxin-producing cyanobacterium.
In 2000, the Oregon State Department of Health surveyed
87 commercially available products of blue-green algae
and found 85 of them (98%) contaminated with microcystin
compounds. Dietary supplements are exempt by law from
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulation.
|
Means of detection:
|
Blooms are not always caused by only one species of
algae, but may consist of several species. Cyanobacteria
can be identified, using light microscopy, by a botanist
or microbiologist or other personnel trained to analyze
microorganisms. Microscopy cannot determine whether
the algae under examination are producing toxic compounds.
|
Laboratory tests of water samples can confirm whether
or not a bloom is toxic. The best established method
for toxicity is the mouse bioassay, in which algal
components are injected into the mice's abdomens and
the mice observed for effects. The LD50 (lethal dose,
enough to kill 50% of the observed group) is determined
by this method. This method is not suitable for field
testing. Other methods to elucidate compounds of interest
include liquid and gas chromatography, mass spectrometry,
and ELISA (enzyme link immunosorbant assay), which
can establish the presence or absence of characterized
compounds known to be toxic, such as microcystins.
These laboratory methods, particularly the mouse bioassay,
are not readily available and are typically done by
research institutions. The University of North Carolina
at Wilmington conducts research on algae and their
toxins, and utilizes most, if not all, of the above
methods. Several forms of microcystins have been characterized,
but Microcystin-LR is considered the most potent.
An important caveat is that many of these toxic compounds
are congeners. That is, the side-chains (or attachments)
to the compounds' base chemical structure can alter
the potency of the toxin. This may have implications
in testing for compounds in that screening for one
well-characterized toxin such as microcystin-LR may
be negative while other forms of the base molecule
are indeed present but not detected by the assay.
The sensitivity, specificity and predictive value
of these tests are not yet defined.
|
At present, field testing kits for toxin detection
are not widely available.
|
Precautions to take around blooms of blue-green algae:
|
The likelihood of people being affected by a blue-green
algae bloom is very low. Those with a predisposition
to environmental allergies may have an increased risk
mostly from exposure to aerosolized blue-green algae.
Risk appears to be related to intensity and duration
of contact, as well as route of exposure. The primary
risk of exposure to toxic metabolites is from ingestion
or immersion in water in direct proximity to a bloom.
|
During a cyanobacterial bloom, water looks and smells
bad, and the inclination is to avoid such water. Older
children or adults would not voluntarily drink, get
close to, or swim in the water. However, younger children
and animals might get in it or drink it, and so would
be at higher risk from a bloom.
|
Therefore, to minimize the risk of direct contact
one should:
|
• Limit exposure to water where blue-green
algae are readily visible. Boating is less risky
than swimming or wading; walking on the shore or
fishing from a dock is less risky than being out
on the water.
|
• Do not wade or swim in water containing
visible blooms. Avoid contacting dense mats of algae
unless precautions are taken to prevent direct contact.
|
• Do not drink the water or let children,
livestock or pets get into or drink the water.
|
• Do not drink untreated water from water
bodies regardless of whether noticeable blooms are
present nearby. In addition to possible health risks
from algal blooms, other gastrointestinal illnesses
can also be contracted by drinking untreated water,
such as giardiasis, cryptosporidiosis, hepatitis
A viral infection or E. coli-related diseases.
|
• People who are prone to hay fever and asthma
from environmental triggers should avoid algal bloom
areas.
|
• Because of the potential for local irritation
from direct skin contact, it is recommended that
water-resistant gloves be used in handling and removing
unwanted algae that may build up or wash up on shores
and surfaces. If contact is made, clean water should
be used to dilute and remove algal residues.
|
• Contact the county health department and
(or) the regional office of the N.C. Division of
Water Quality about investigating the bloom and
identifying the predominant species.
|
• Wild animals, birds and even pets may drink
and become ill from drinking algae-tainted water.
If unusual numbers of dead animals are seen around
a lake, that fact should be reported to the county
Health Department and/or the county Animal Control
section.
|
Conclusions: |
Around the world and in the United States, researchers
and public health officials are looking into blue-green
algae's effect on water quality, both for drinking
and recreational uses. Blue-green algae blooms are
an increasing problem worldwide, clogging waterways,
polluting ponds, and threatening drinking water supplies.
A cyanobacteria bloom indicates that the local ecosystem
is out of balance. Because of continuing eutrophication
and other negative impacts on aquatic ecology, this
problem will undoubtedly become worse.
|
Cyanobacteria and their constituents can be unsightly
and unpleasant to be around. Some cyanobacteria are
potentially toxic, but these effects have been more
problematic in other countries, notably Australia
and Canada, and primarily with respect to animals
rather than humans. These two countries have large
programs investigating water quality issues and causes
of freshwater blooms because of the growing impact
on drinking water sources. While many toxins have
been described, reports of actual ill-effects from
direct exposure to algae are exceedingly rare in the
human medical literature and are mostly associated
with the marine algae. The greatest risk for severe
disease from any algae is from ingestion of contaminated
water and/or contaminated shellfish, which concentrate
the toxins. Adverse health effects from being in proximity
to an algal bloom (other than reacting to the smell)
are difficult to prove and likely depend on the individual,
as some people are sensitized to environmental allergens
like mold, grass, pollen, and perhaps certain algae.
While there are a number of treatments for symptoms,
the best method is prevention, that is, simply avoiding
direct exposure.
|
Bibliography:
|
1. Ahluwalia KB. Culture of the Organism
that Causes Rhinosporidiosis. J Laryng Otol 113:523-528,
1999.
2. Elder GH, Hunter PR, Codd GA. Hazardous Freshwater
Cyanobacteria (Blue-Green Algae). Lancet 341:1519-20,
1993.
3. Gilroy DJ, Kauffman KW, et. al. Assessing Potential
Health Risks from Microcystin Toxins in Blue-Green
Algae Dietary Supplements. Environmental Health
Perspectives 108(5), 435-39, 2000.
4. Jochimsen EM, Carmichael WW, et. al. Liver Failure
and Death after Exposure to Microcystins at a Hemodialysis
Center in Brazil. NEJM 338(13):873-878, 1998.
5. Kuiper-Goodman T, Falconer I, Fitzgerald J. "Human
Health Aspects". In: Toxic Cyanobacteria in
Water: A Guide to their Public Health Consequences,
Monitoring and Management. Chorus, I and Bartram
J (ed.), London: E &FN Spon, 1999.
6. Pouria S, de Andrade A, et. al. Fatal Microcystin
Intoxication in Haemodialysis Unit in Caruaru, Brazil.
Lancet 352:21-26, 1998.
7. Ressom R, Soong FS, Fitzgerald J, et. al. Health
Effects of Toxic Cyanobacteria (Blue-Green Algae).
National Health and Medical Research Council, Commonwealth
of Australia, 1994.
8. Turner PC, Gammie AJ, et al. Pneumonia Associated
with Contact with Cyanobacteria. Brit Med J 300:1440-1,
1990.
|
| |
|
|
If you liked this
article please let us know by signing our guestbook.
|
|
Ken and Pat Motes
Clear Creek Farms
33 South Clear Creek Road
Fall River, Tennessee 38468
Phone: (931) 852-2168 or (931) 852-2167
Web Page Designed by CCF Design (our company)
Copyright © 2002 -2009 All Rights Reserved
|
|
|