MCS, Toxic Mold, Sick Building Syndrome, and
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
by Thomas Leo Ogren
MCS, Toxic Mold, Sick Building
Syndrome, and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Often people who suffer from undiagnosed illnesses may be
experiencing multiple chemical sensitivities (MCS), chronic
fatigue syndrome (CFS), unusual
pollen or mold reactions, food allergies, fibromyalgia, or even
combinations of one or more of these.
Last spring I gave a talk to a group of allergists from
San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara Counties (California). I
mentioned that I liked to see allergists hire college
horticulture students to map the exact species of plants
growing in a patient’s yard. Sometimes, as I explained, without
knowledge of exactly what is growing closest to them, it is
next to impossible to figure out the problem.
One of the allergists then told me this true story: They had a
patient, a woman in her 60’s, from Santa Barbara, who was
extremely sick and getting sicker by the day. She was having
classic symptoms of both allergy and asthma, was not responding
to any type of treatment, and they were afraid that she would
die. And so they took the unusual step of sending someone from
their office out to her house to look it all over.
The allergist’s assistant didn’t find any high allergy plants
in her yards. He didn’t find any strange houseplants in her
house, nor any unreported pets or anything of the sort. He saw
no walls, windows, bathrooms or anything that appeared to pose
a mold problem. The house was an older one, and he doubted that
it was off-gassing chemicals. He was about to give up when he
noticed a door he hadn’t seen before. “Where does that go?” he
asked her.
“To my basement,” she told him.
Now, because basements are rare in California, he was surprised
to discover this. When he opened the door, turned on the lights
and walked down the steps he was even more surprised. There,
growing all over the cement floor of her basement were
thousands of unusual looking mushrooms. When he asked her why
they were there, she told him, “Well, they just started to grow
there and I let them grow since they were so pretty.”
I’m sure you can figure out the rest of the story. He took
samples of the mushrooms back to the office and the woman was
tested for spores from these same fungi and it turned out that
her entire system was swamped with these allergenic, poisonous
mushroom spores. The mushrooms were of some rare species native
to the southeastern US and no one ever did figure out how their
spores had arrived in that lady’s basement and started
growing.
The mushrooms were removed, the basement was cleaned up and the
patient regained her health.
Another interesting episode of trigger sleuthing: A woman from
Lompoc, California asked me to look over the yard of her
apartment to see if I could figure out what was making her so
sick. She was in her late 30’s, married, had always enjoyed
excellent health, but was getting sicker and sicker. She was
starting to forget things, had headaches, sore throats, was
always tired, often had stuffed up sinuses, and now and then
would slur her words while she was talking. More and more she
would forget what she was saying right in mid-sentence.
It was a nice enough apartment, neat and orderly, and she told
me that their rent was very reasonable. Inside I discovered
that one wall in her bedroom, next to her bed, looked moldy. I
also found another wall, a wall in the living room that also
looked moldy. Outside in the yard I discovered that the
rainbird sprinklers for the lawn would hit the wall directly
every time they went around. There had also been a leak in the
roof, directly over the bedroom wall. I suggested she hire
someone to do an inside and outside mold count for her. This
she did and it was found that the mold spore count was high in
the yard, and even higher inside the house. It was highest in
her bedroom.
She then confessed that she had tried to clean up all this
mold, several times, using soap and water. Afterwards she had
felt even sicker.
I suggested that she explain all of this to the landlord, and
immediately move out until it was fixed.
She did explain it all to the landlord, but she did not move
out. The landlord hired someone who supposedly cleaned it all
up but she just got sicker and sicker.
One day a few weeks later she called me up again. She was
crying and told me that her doctor said that she had MS. The
symptoms she was having certainly did seem like multiple
sclerosis but I didn’t think that was her problem. As we talked
she would lose it, stutter, slur her words, forget what she’d
just said.
She said that she’d had to take a leave of absence from her job
since she just couldn’t work any more. When I asked her what
she was doing instead of working, she said she was mostly just
lying in her bed. It was about all she could do. “That
bedroom,” I told her, “is killing you.”
I called her back later and got her husband on the phone. He
was now starting to feel kind of sick himself. “Look,” I said,
a little angry now, “ get the hell out of there! Leave that
apartment and do it tonight. Pack a few things, go to a motel
and check yourselves in. Tomorrow you can tell your landlord
what you had to do. If they won’t pay for the motel bill, I’ll
help you find a lawyer and you can sue him.
They moved out of the apartment that night and into a nearby
motel room. He took some time off work and the two of them just
hung out at the motel, watching TV, eating in a restaurant
around the corner, and they slept a good deal. The landlord (I
think he was finally afraid of a lawsuit) did agree to cover
their motel bill while this was being figured out.
On the phone I advised her husband that he ought to start
looking for a new apartment. He told me that he was starting to
feel more “like himself again,” and agreed to look for a
different place to live.
They stayed at the motel for two weeks and by the time they
moved into their new apartment she too was starting to feel a
little better. I insisted that her husband move everything from
their old apartment himself. That all their clothes,
everything, had to be thoroughly cleaned before he brought it
into their next place. I didn’t want her to even walk in that
door again, and she didn’t.
As I write this now, it has been just over two years since they
moved out of that mold spore-ridden apartment. Little by little
she started getting better, the slurring of words stopped, the
disorientation stopped, eventually all the symptoms
disappeared. Two months after they moved she went back to work.
Six months later she felt so good she started taking night
classes at the local college. They are now both working full
time, both are taking advanced computer classes in the evenings
and they are doing great. There’s been no more talk about her
having MS either.
About the Author
Thomas Ogren is the author of Allergy-Free Gardening. Tom
does consulting work on landscaping for the USDA, county asthma
coalitions, http://www.Allegra.com, and the
Canadian and American Lung Associations. He has appeared on
HGTV and The Discovery Channel. His book, Safe Sex in the
Garden, was published in 2003. In 2004 Time Warner Books
published his latest book: What the Experts May NOT Tell You
About: Growing the Perfect Lawn. His website:
www.allergyfree-gardening.com
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