Mercury is ubiquitous in the environment and its presence is often not associated with human disease. There are elemental, inorganic, and organic forms of mercury. This review will focus on the effects of organic mercury, especially methylmercury, on the human nervous system. In Japan inorganic mercuric sulfate, which has been used as an industrial catalyst for acetaldehyde synthesis, was discharged into the sea by an industrial plant near the Japanese fishing village of Minamata in the 1950sReference Irukayama 1 and later also into the Agano River in Niigata, Japan in the 1960s.Reference Tsubaki, Shirakawa, Hirota, Kondo, Sato and Kanbayashi 2 Inorganic mercury is converted into methylmercury (CH3Hg+) in industrial plants or by microorganisms in aquatic sediments and then mercury enters the aquatic food chain and is present in muscle tissues of predatory fish and may be consumed by humans in fish fillets. In many patients the exposure to mercury occurs over long periods, typically years, and this food-borne poisoning that causes neurological disease is called Minamata disease in Japan and thousands of cases have been documented. Consumption of bread made from seed wheat treated with methylmercuric fungicide in Iraq in 1971 and 1972 caused thousands of cases of severe intoxication and many deaths,Reference Bakir, Damluji and Amin-Zaki 3 There were earlier similar epidemics in Iraq in 1956 and 1960.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4
In 1970 it was recognized that the English—Wabigoon River system in northwestern Ontario, Canada was contaminated with mercury. It was later determined that the point source of the contamination was a chlor-alkali plant, Dryden Chemicals Limited. The plant had dumped untreated mercury wastewater into the Wabigoon River between 1962 and 1970, which contaminated the rivers and lakes downstream and affected the Grassy Narrows First Nation and Wabaseemoong Independent Nations (formerly Islington Band, formally Whitedog).Reference Manko 5 Harada et alReference Harada, Fujino and Oorui 6 reported neurological disease meeting criteria for methylmercury poisoning affecting residents of Grassy Narrows, Ontario. In 1985 an out of court settlement was negotiated by Wabaseemoong Independent Nations and Grassy Narrows First Nation with the Canadian government, the province of Ontario, and two paper companies for all claims due to mercury contamination in the English—Wabigoon River system and legislation was subsequently enacted to carry out the terms of the settlement. Members of these communities whose health may have been affected by mercury poisoning are potentially eligible for an award from an established disability fund upon application and a medical evaluation.Reference Manko 5
Neurological Disease Caused by Methylmercury
It has been recognized that methylmercury causes selective injury of the nervous system of humans with only relatively minor involvement of other organs, including gastrointestinal tract inflammation, fatty degeneration of the liver and kidneys, alteration of pancreatic islet cells, hypoplasia of bone marrow, and atrophy of lymph nodes.Reference Takeuchi 7 The brain is the primary target of organic mercury exposures, whereas peripheral nervous system involvement is more common with elemental and inorganic mercury exposures. Neuropathological studies have been helpful in determining the neuroanatomical sites of neuronal injury, and there have been autopsy reports on hundreds of cases of Minamata disease in Japan. MRI has also demonstrated lesions involving the cerebral cortex and cerebellum.Reference Korogi, Takahashi, Shinzato and Okajima 8 There is symmetrical involvement of lesions in the brain.Reference Eto 9 With acute exposure in Iraq, symptoms began insidiously 2-6 weeks after ingestion of the contaminated bread.Reference Maghazaji 10 There may be a long latency period lasting weeks to months from the time of exposure until the onset of symptoms, although the explanation for the long latency period remains unclear.Reference Nierenberg, Nordgren and Chang 11 There is evidence that there may be delayed neurotoxicity of methylmercury with aging that may be manifested many years after cessation of exposure.Reference Rice 12 The fetal brain is more susceptible than the adult brain to the toxic effects of methylmercury and may be affected as the result of maternal exposure.Reference Clarkson, Magos and Myers 13 The migration and division of neurons is inhibited, resulting in disruption of the cytoarchitecture of the developing brainReference Clarkson, Magos and Myers 13 and severe mental and motor developmental deficits.
Pathology and Pathogenesis
Pathological studies have been reported in Minamata disease.Reference Eto 9 , Reference Eto, Marumoto and Takeya 14 , Reference Takeuchi, Morikawa, Matsumoto and Shiraisha 15 The most severe damage is noted in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices with neuronal loss. Many autophagosomes are present, particularly in cerebral neurons.Reference Eto, Marumoto and Takeya 14 Mercury granules may be detected.Reference Eto, Marumoto and Takeya 14 Major mechanisms of methylmercury-induced cell damage include disruption of calcium homeostasis, induction of oxidative stress, and interactions with sulfhydryl groups.Reference Ceccatelli, Dare and Moors 16 Targeting of proteins and peptides containing cysteine and methionine contributes to the cytotoxicity of methylmercury.Reference Ceccatelli, Dare and Moors 16
Brain Disease
Unlike inorganic mercury intoxication, the symptoms of organic mercury poisoning chiefly involve the brain.Reference Eyl 17 Typical signs of methylmercury poisoning include cerebellar ataxia, dysarthria, and constriction of the visual fields, which is known as the Hunter-Russell triad after their publication from London, United Kingdom in 1954.Reference Eto 9 These three clinical features are often accompanied by hearing impairment and sensory disturbance. In the brain the injury is most severe involving the cerebral cortex and the cerebellar cortex, whereas the brainstem is less affected and the spinal cord is least involved.Reference Eto, Marumoto and Takeya 14 In Minamata disease in Japan, there was prominent degeneration and atrophy of the cerebellum due to toxicity to granule cell neurons and of the calcarine cortex.Reference Eto 9 Experimental studies in common marmosets confirmed the selective vulnerability of the cerebral cortex in methylmercury poisoning.Reference Eto, Yasutake and Kuwana 18
Visual Field Constriction
Impairment of visual acuity associated with bilateral concentric constriction of the visual fields is caused by damage to the primary visual cortex in the calcarine region, and is regarded by many authorities as the most pathognomonic finding in Minamata disease. Pathologically, atrophy is most marked at the anterior ends of the calcarine fissures with relative sparing near the occipital poles, which explains the preservation of central vision that is located at the posterior extremity of the visual cortex.Reference Hunter and Russell 19 There is loss of neurons in the calcarine area and the histopathological appearance progresses to status spongiosis.Reference Takeuchi, Morikawa, Matsumoto and Shiraisha 15 A study of eight patients with Minamata disease showed moderate to severe constriction of the visual fields with central vision ranging from 7° to 42° from the point of fixation. MRI showed dilation of the ventral portion of the calcarine fissures and T2-weighted images showed hyperintense lesions sparing the most posterior portion of the striate cortex.Reference Korogi, Takahashi and Hirai 20 In a slightly smaller series of seven patients with concentric constriction of the visual fields reported by the same group 3 years earlier, it was noted that all of the patients also had sensory disturbance and ataxia, indicating that the characteristic visual field impairment was not an isolated finding.Reference Korogi, Takahashi, Shinzato and Okajima 8 The prevalence of constriction of visual fields was estimated to be about 29% among residents of Minamata.Reference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Takao and Harada 21
Ataxia and Dysarthria
Cerebellar ataxia is present in 81%-94% of patients with Minamata disease and in 95% of patients in Iraq with methylmercury poisoning.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4 There is often associated dysarthria with cerebellar features (scanning speech), which occurred in 72% (33 of 46) of patients with methylmercury poisoning after eating bread from treated wheat in Iraq.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4 Nystagmus is not usually observed. Pathologically there is atrophy of the cerebellum with a profound loss of cells in the granular cell layer with relative sparing of Purkinje cells; changes are most marked in the depths of the sulci with relatively normal cortex at the surface.Reference Hunter and Russell 19 There is marked loss of granule cell neurons and also of Golgi cells. Other movement disorders, including choreiform or athetotic movements and hemiballismus, are observed in only a minority of patients.Reference McAlpine and Araki 22
Hearing Loss and Disequilbrium
Many patients experience hearing loss. Hearing loss is due to injury in the primary auditory area in the region of the transverse gyrus in the temporal lobes, but may also be due to cochlear involvement. The prevalence of hearing difficulties was estimated to about 29% among residents of MinamataReference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Takao and Harada 21 and in 19% of 53 patients with methylmercury poisoning in Iraq.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4 Over time some patients show improvement of hearing impairment, whereas others have deterioration that may be, at least in part, related to aging.Reference Mizukoshi, Watanabe and Kobayashi 23 In contrast, there was little significant change over time in caloric nystagmus test and body equilibrium tests.Reference Mizukoshi, Watanabe and Kobayashi 23 Dizziness and unsteadiness were observed in 98 cases out of 144 (68%) with organomercury intoxication in Niigata, Japan.Reference Ino and Mizukoshi 24
Tremor
With methylmercury poisoning in Iraq, 7 of 53 (13%) patients had intention tremor and flapping and static tremor was observed in one (2%) each.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4 Postural and action tremor are recognized in Minamata disease. YamanagaReference Yamanaga 25 evaluated eight patients with Minamata disease who were unselected with respect to tremor. He found that seven of the eight (88%) patients with Minamata disease had postural and action tremor. The mean frequency of the postural tremor was 7.1 Hz for Minamata disease versus 8.7 Hz for essential tremor and 9.5 Hz in normal subjects (the frequency declined with age), whereas the mean amplitude was 1.8 mV for Minamata disease versus 1.1 mV in normals. Interestingly, one of the eight patients had a much lower postural frequency of 4.5 Hz. YamanagaReference Yamanaga 25 speculated that the tremor in Minamata disease may be related to the involvement of cerebellar granule cell neurons affecting cerebellar output.
Cognitive Impairment and Psychiatric Features
Mental confusion is commonly observed in seriously ill patients with Minamata disease and patients may be drowsy or restless.Reference McAlpine and Araki 22 Progression may occur to stupor or coma in fatal cases.Reference McAlpine and Araki 22 Three of 27 patients (11%) with methylmercury poisioning in Iraq had dementia.Reference Rustam and Hamdi 4 Psychiatric features include depression and irritability, which were observed in 74% and 44% of 43 patients, respectively, with methylmercury poisoning in Iraq.Reference Maghazaji 10 In comparison, more severe psychiatric symptoms with psychotic features have been observed with exposure to inorganic mercury such as the “mad hatter” in the felt hat industry.Reference Maghazaji 10
Somatosensory Disorder and Peripheral Nerve Disease
Numbness and paresthesias with associated sensory impairment in the distal extremities occurs in the majority of patients with Minamata disease. In Japan paresthesias of the extremities was used as the gold standard for identification of Minamata disease due to methylmercury poisioning because paresthesias usually appear earliest and have the lowest threshold in outbreaks in Japan and also in Iraq.Reference Bakir, Damluji and Amin-Zaki 3 Mild cases may manifest as paresthesias only.Reference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Inoue, Takao, Harada and Kawachi 26 In comparison, the prevalence of paresthesias in non-exposed regions of Japan was less than 1.1%.Reference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Inoue, Takao, Harada and Kawachi 26 In Japan a diagnosis of Minamata disease using diagnostic criteria established in 1977 required paresthesias plus cerebellar ataxia, disturbed sense of equilibrium, concentric constriction of the visual fields, or CNS ophthalmologic or otologic disturbance. However, more recent work indicates a sensitivity of the criteria of only 66%, hence, the requirement for paresthesias results in an underestimation of Minimata disease.Reference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Inoue, Takao, Harada and Kawachi 26 In most cases deep tendon reflexes are preserved or hyperactive rather than reduced or absent.Reference Yorifuji, Tsuda, Takao and Harada 21 , Reference Ninomiya, Imamura, Kuwahata, Kindaichi, Susa and Ekino 27 An associated perioral sensory disturbance is common, with an “onion peel” somatosensory distribution indicating involvement of the cerebral cortex rather than due to a localization involving peripheral nerves. Electrophysiological testing and somatosensory evoked potentials clarified that the lesion associated with the persistent sensory disorder is in the somatosensory cortex (in the postcentral gyrus) and not in peripheral nerves.Reference Tokuomi, Uchino, Imamura, Yamanaga, Nakanishi and Ideta 28 The findings of evenly distributed increased touch thresholds in both distal and proximal locations and increased two-point discrimination thresholds in both forefingers and lips also confirmed localization in the somatosensory cortex.Reference Ninomiya, Imamura, Kuwahata, Kindaichi, Susa and Ekino 27 Early reports indicated that peripheral nerves were histopathologically intact.Reference Hunter and Russell 19 Electrophysiologic and histopathologic studies on sural nerves of Minamata disease patients showed no differences with control subjects.Reference Nagaki, Ohnishi and Kuroiwa 29 TakeuchiReference Takeuchi 7 described pathological findings in 17 cases of Minamata disease and found no changes in either the peripheral nerves or spinal cord. However, in a report of six patients with sural nerve biopsiesReference Eto and Takeuchi 30 and one patient with an autopsy,Reference Eto, Tokunaga, Nagashima and Takeuchi 31 all with typical Minamata disease with clinical evidence of brain involvement, there was pathological evidence of peripheral nerve degeneration. The biopsies showed irregularly shaped myelin sheaths, incomplete regeneration of nerve fibers, and collagen increase.Reference Eto and Takeuchi 30 The autopsy case showed Wallerian degeneration of the fasciculus gracilis and endoneurrial fibrosis and loss of nerve fibers and the presence of Bünger’s bands in dorsal roots and in sural nerve.Reference Eto, Tokunaga, Nagashima and Takeuchi 31 Hence, it is not clear to what extent sensory symptoms in patients with Minamata disease reflect involvement of somatosensory cortex versus peripheral nerves, but no cases have been reported exclusively with peripheral nerve degeneration.
Laboratory Investigations
When a meal containing methylmercury is eaten, peak mercury levels occur 4-14 hours later and then several hours more for distribution in the body; it subsequently takes months for elimination.Reference Airey 32 , Reference Miettinen, Rahola, Hattula, Rissanen and Tillander 33 A variety of laboratory investigations can be performed to detect the presence of mercury in the body, including blood mercury levelsReference Sherlock, Hislop, Newton, Topping and Whittle 34 and assays on scalp hair samplesReference Airey 32 and toenails.Reference Longnecker, Stampfer and Morris 35 Toenails are considered biomarkers for mercury exposure occurring 3-12 months before exposureReference Longnecker, Stampfer and Morris 35 and possibly longer. However, these assays are of limited value because mercury is excreted slowly from the body and assays may not reflect the situation when previous neuronal injury occurred many years earlier resulting in chronic neurological disease. This highlights the need for detailed clinical assessments in assessing neurological deficits related to mercury poisoning.
Treatment
Unfortunately, there is no known therapy that is effective for reducing neuronal damage. Methylmercury exposure from dietary sources (e.g., fish) usually occurs over a long period lasting months to years. By the time that neurological symptoms and signs develop, irreversible neuronal damage has already occurred and therapy with chelators is not effective.Reference Clarkson, Magos and Myers 13 Of course, it is important to eliminate a contaminated dietary source in order to prevent further exposure and damage.
Conclusions
Methylmercury poisoning causes chronic neurological disease predominantly due to direct neuronal injury in the brain, particularly involving the cerebral cortex and granule cells in the cerebellum. Detailed clinical assessments are needed to evaluate the extent of neurological deficits due to mercury poisoning because laboratory investigations are of limited value and do not assess past neuronal injury that may be due to high-dose exposure that occurred decades earlier.
Disclosure
ACJ has received fees administered by the Grassy Narrows First Nation and Wabaseemoong Independent Nations Mercury Disability Board unrelated to the submitted work.