Symptoms from exposure vary depending on the dose, chemical form, mode and duration of exposure, as well as individual characteristics and health status.
Arsenic is a local irritant to mucous membranes and causes eye irritation, nose irritation, epistaxis and nasal septum perforation.
Acute poisoning results in acute abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, cramps in the extremities, restlessness and spasms. There may be cardiac arrhythmias, liver toxicity, kidney failure and peripheral neuropathy, convulsions, dehydration, shock and death at very high doses.
Skin folds (nose, mouth, axillae, scrotum) with moist surfaces are susceptible to local irritation, vesiculitis, folliculitis and ulcers. Arsenic also causes skin hyperpigmentation, hyperkeratosis and sensitisation. The skin changes are the most obvious signs of chronic inorganic arsenic toxicity.
Chronic poisoning may cause peripheral neuropathy, cardiomyopathy and arrythmias, as well as non-malignant pulmonary changes.
Inorganic arsenic is classified as a carcinogen (Group 1, IARC). The metabolites, MMAv and DMAv, are classified as possible carcinogens (Group 2B, IARC). Chronic arsenic exposure is associated with skin, lung and bladder cancers. Skin cancers include basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma. Smoking has also been shown to increase the risk of lung cancer in workers exposed to arsenic.
Health monitoring
Health monitoring consists of:
- taking a medical and work exposure history,as well as a smoking and vaping history
- conducting a clinical examination of the skin (hands, forearms and exposed areas), as well as the respiratory and peripheral nervous systems
- biological monitoring (urinary arsenic).