Lic. No. 798679
 
Menu Navigation
Home
Toxic Mold Remediation
Fungi Information
Employment opportunities
Deflooding
Structure Drying
The Lab
Unsanitary Loss
Sandbags
FAQ
Corporation History
Site Map
Contact Us
Fungi Navigation
Background on Mold
Toxic Microscopic Molds
Mold Terms & Definitions
MeruliPORIA incrassata
Mycotoxins
What does Fungi Eat?
Where does Fungi Live?
How Moist is too Moist?
When does Fungi Threaten Human Health?
New York State Guidelines
Our Projects
Archived Project
Current Projects
Links to Other Sites
ASCR                                
IICRC
poria.com
ACGIH
IAQA.ORG
IAQCOUNCIL.ORG
Site Search
  All Words
  Any Word
  Phrase
 
Background on Molds

 

 

Fungi (mold in this case) and its spores are everywhere.  It only becomes a problem when it grows in our living and/or working environments.  Aspergillus, Cladosporium and Penicillium are just a few groups of common molds found indoors that can grow within 48 hours of a water loss.  Some fungi such as Stachybotrys Chartarum (also known as Stachybotrys atra or SA), have been known to produce toxins (mycotoxins) and aflatoxins that are harmful to animals and humans when ingested, inhaled or in direct contact with the skin.

Mold spores are fungal reproductive cells (seeds) of about the same size, or smaller, as pollen grains. They can occur in various colors and shapes, such as round, spheroid, banana-shaped, or tadpole-shaped. They can occur in enormous quantities, and at all times of the year. Mold spores can be found and generated at serious levels indoors, as well as out.

Fungus can invade healthy individuals and can cause a variety of adverse health effects. The most common response is allergies and flu-like symptoms (runny nose, sneezing, sinus congestion, and skin rashes). Allergies result from inhaling mold spores. When environmental conditions become conducive, many molds develop fungal hyphae, small stock-like appendages containing spores. These spores are analogous to plant seeds and can be spread by the billions when air currents pass over the hyphae. Because of the mycotoxins contained in the cell walls of the hyphae and its spores, even dead fungi are capable of causing allergic symptoms.

Mold spores can be airborne, and get indoors through doors, windows or cracks and crevices, or be carried in from the outdoors on shoes and clothing, pets and insects. Building materials that were left outside before use can harbor viable (living) mold spores for many years. Indoor environments are never entirely free of molds. As a general rule of thumb, in a "healthy" building the concentration of spores and the mix of mold species tend to be similar (better if less than) to the surrounding outdoor environment levels.

If buildings are air-conditioned, or windows and doors are kept closed in the summer, concentration of spores within should even be lower than outside levels. High moisture (70% relative humidity or above) in a building will invariably lead to mold, mildew, or other microbial growth. Fungal growth requires four basic things: a food source (common soils or most building materials), ideal temperature (between 68 and 86 degrees Fahrenheit), mold spores (ubiquitous in ambient air), and moisture.

Some molds also produce toxins (poisons) which are thought to be useful in killing competing molds in their vicinity. These toxins can also have deleterious effects on humans when ingested, inhaled or in direct contact with the skin. On the other hand these toxins can save tens of thousand lives each year such as an enzyme found in the mold Penicillium called penicillin. The fungi that produce toxins are known as toxigenic fungi.  The latest World Health Organization (WHO) publication on mycotoxins, available in 1990, indicated that there are more than 200 mycotoxins produced by a variety of common fungi. Historically, mycotoxins are a problem to farmers and food industries and in Eastern European and third world countries. However, many toxigenic fungi, such as Stachybotrys Chartarum and species of Aspergillus and Penicillium, have been found to infest buildings with known indoor air and building-related problems.


Basic Definitions:

 

Absorb - 1. to suck up or drink in (a liquid). 2. to take up or receive by chemical or molecular action 3. to incorporate or assimilate (something). For instance, a sponge will absorb a substance and store it within its self, and not on the surface. Only porous and semi-porous materials can absorb a substance.

Adsorb - (ad sorbs) to gather (a gas, liquid, or dissolved substance) on a surface in a condensed layer, as when charcoal adsorbs gases. In other words, adsorb means to store a substance on the surface of something.

Conidium - A unicellular or multi-cellular fungal element specialized to detach from the mycelium and disseminate, thus serving as an asexual reproductive structure. In other words its a spore.

Dormant - L. dormire, or sleep 1. sleeping 2. inactive 3. in a resting or torpid state. Mold never really dies, it just goes into a dormant state until you add water again

 
 

 

 

 

 
 
Effloresce - (ef lo res) also referred to as efflorescence. 1. a. to change to a mealy or powdery substance upon exposure to air. b. to become incrusted or covered with crystals of salt or the like through evaporation or chemical change. It is that white powdery stuff that comes from a plaster wall or ceiling that is or has suffered water damage.
 
     
  Effluence - (ef loo ens) 1. the process of action of flowing out. 2. something that flows out; emanation. In our case , its a term used in the water damage industry in describing a sewage spill or main-line sewer back-flow.  
 

 

 

 
 

Fungus - Fungus is singular for one type of a plant-type organism such as a mold or a mildew.

Fungi - Fungi or funguses is plural for multiple types of fungus.

Fungicide - An antimicrobial used to kill molds and mildews. They consist of many different types but bleach is the most commonly used in the home.

Fungistat - An antimicrobial used to prevent mold or mildew from growing provided it hasn't already colonized.

HEPA - (hee pa) HEPA stands for High Efficiency Particulate Air. I believe HEPA should stand for Highly Efficient Particulate Arrester. Meaning it stops the particle by trapping it in the filter, and high efficient air is the byproduct. A filter that removes 99.97 to 99.99 percent of airborne particles as small as 0.3 microns in diameter. They were invented by the Government in the nineteen fifty's to filter out nuclear active particles out of the air in nuclear power plants.

Hypha - (hi fa) Hypha is singular. Hypha is a single elongated, cylindrical, rod-shape filamentous (hair-like) microscopic plant organism forming the basic fungus structure.

Hyphae - (hi fay) Hyphae is plural for more then one filamentous fungi unit. In other words it's more then one plant-like organism.

Hypoallergenic - Someone who is easily stimulated by allergy causing materials.

Indirect Growth - Mold growth not associated with direct water such as a broken pipe or leaky roof. In other words growth that grows with high levels of humidity.

Industrial Hygienist - A professional qualified by education, training and experience to anticipate, recognize, evaluate and develop controls for occupational health hazards and environmental issues.

Immunocompromised - Someone who is unable to produce an adequate immune response to invasion by various pathogens, due to age, sickness, exhaustion or a regimen of drugs, any of which may render the body's immune system less than effective.

Mycelia - Advanced colonies of mycelia is just another way of saying a group of fungus. A large number of individual units clumped together making it visible to the naked eye.

Permeate - To migrate through. Water that evaporates out of porous or semi-porous materials.

Spore - A walled, single-to-many-celled reproductive body of an organism, capable of giving rise to a new individual either directly or indirectly. A reproductive seed-like element that detaches from fungi and is a sexual reproductive element. Also see Conidium. In other words its a seed from fungus.

Yeasts - Yeasts are unicellular fungi. In other words molds are formed by long chains of cells, yeasts are separate microscopic plant-like organisms.

 

 

 

Mycology:  The study of fungi.  Fungi are broken down  into two types; micro fungi and macro fungi.

Micro fungi: Are microscopic and other wise known as molds and mildews, rust, smuts, etc.  Unless we're looking into a microscope, micro fungi must be in clumps of advanced colonies of mycelia for us to see them.  Mold and mildew often aren't seen as great health threats because they are referred to by common names.  However fungi of any variety can contribute to adverse health effects in humans and animals.

Macro fungi:  Much larger relatives of macro fungi include mushrooms, bracts, and puffballs.  Have you ever wondered why mushrooms pop up above ground?  It enables reproduction.  By rising above ground macro fungi allow for spore dispersal.

Spores:  Seed like spores released by the sporangium carrying and protecting the substances which will produce young fungi.  They can be single or multi-celled.  Spores range from 2-20 microns (um) in size, although some are larger then 100 um.  Spores with thick walls are built to survive extremely harsh conditions.  They can lie dormant until a moist environment is available to support growth.  Most spores are adapted for air travel dispersal.  For example if mold is sprayed with a biocide, the burst of air in front of the biocide can disperse the spores.  Spores are designed to survive.

HEPA: High Efficiency Particulate Arrester. Although the "A" stands for air, it should stand for arrestor. Clean air is a by product. The filter is stopping, trapping, arresting the particulates. The filter was designed to filter out nuclear particulate in power plants in the 1950's. Rumor has it that some original filters are still in place and working to this day.

Hypha singular - Hyphae plural:  Fungi's growing structure - their roots, stock and branches collectively.  They are the thread-like structures that are visible through a microscope.  Groups of hyphae are called mycelia.

Metabolites: Mycotoxins, aflatoxins, satratoxins are metabolites. A chemical compound produced by molds to either breakdown the organic matter (food source) it wants to decompose, or to fend off other molds, bacteria or things from growing or killing them.

Mycotoxins:  Chemicals produced  by molds which cause a toxic response to humans if ingested, inhaled, or in direct contact with the skin.