Guest guest Posted March 8, 2006 Report Share Posted March 8, 2006 If we wish to connect our wealth of experience with IEQ's technical standards in a meaningful way, our comments must be reasonable, credible, and based upon something more than speculation and accidentaly misuse of technical terms. I was laboring under the misperception that a volatile toxic gas such as trimethylarsine from " emerald green " or " Scheele's green " arsenic based pigments in wallpaper would constitute a " mycotoxin " . Our discussion on IEQ indicates that toxicity is not the determining factor in this classification, and that despite culpability in a great number illnesses and deaths, trimethylarsine would be correctly termed a " Fungal toxin " instead of a " mycotoxin " . Mycotoxins are strictly defined as secondary metabolites to separate them from fungal by-products and mVOC's - toxicity notwithstanding. Trimethylarsine would qualify as a mycotoxin ONLY if the process was conducted by the same fungal mechanism which reconfigures substrate into purposeful chemical ecologic metabolites intended to combat competing microorganisms in the environment. If a toxic volatile has not been demonstrated as being constructed for purposes secondary to functions which only sustain viability of the organism, it would be mycotoxicologically more accurate to refer to this as a nonspecific " fungal toxin " until proven otherwise. - (meaning #1, of course) " Intercourse " 1. Dealings or communications between persons or groups. 2. Sexual intercourse. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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