Welding Manganism has become an active issue in
workplace safety as it has been the subject of numerous
product liability lawsuits against manufacturers of
arc welding supplies. In these lawsuits,
welders have accused the manufacturers of failing to provide adequate warning that their products could cause welding fumes to contain dangerously high manganese concentrations that could lead welders to develop manganism. Companies employing welders are also being sued, for what colloquially is known as "welders' disease." However, studies fail to show any link between employment as a welder and manganism (or other neurological problems).
Illicit methcathinone manufacturing Manganism is also documented in reports of illicit
methcathinone manufacturing. This is due to manganese being a byproduct of methcathinone synthesis if
potassium permanganate is used as an oxidiser. Symptoms include apathy, bradykinesia, gait disorder with postural instability, and spastic-hypokinetic
dysarthria. Another street drug sometimes contaminated with manganese is the so-called "Bazooka", prepared by
free-base methods from
cocaine using
manganese carbonate.
Drinking water, fuel additive, Maneb, paint and steelmaking Reports also mention such sources as contaminated drinking water, and fuel additive
methylcyclopentadienyl manganese tricarbonyl (MMT), which on
combustion becomes partially converted into manganese
phosphates and
sulfate that go airborne with the exhaust, and
manganese ethylene-bis-dithiocarbamate (
Maneb), a pesticide. It is found in large quantities in
paint and
steelmaking processes. And in very rare cases it can be caused by a defect of the gene
SLC30A10. ==Pathophysiology==