Does mold make you sick? Doctors seek answers
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fungus expert Joan Bennett did not believe in so-called toxic mold -- the cause of "sick building syndrome" and many lawsuits -- until her New Orleans home was flooded during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
When she got a whiff of the foul air that the black goo had created in her home, she decided to change her research focus and try to find out how and if the fungi that took over most of the flooded homes on the Gulf Coast might make people ill.
"The overwhelming obnoxiousness of the odor and of the enveloping air made me start to believe in something that I had never believed in before -- sick building syndrome," Bennett, of Rutgers University in New Jersey, told a news conference.
But it has been more difficult than she thought.
Bennett believes that molds could potentially cause illness in certain susceptible people via volatile organic compounds -- gassy versions of chemicals produced as the organisms metabolize food.
She has been unable to show this in the lab so far. But she told a joint meeting of the American Society for Microbiology and the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
She has tested various molds on the laboratory roundworm C. elegans. "Sometimes the worm swims away and sometimes the worm does nothing and sometimes the worm eats the fungus," Bennett said.
"I am actually looking for something that has never been discovered by methods that have never been worked out." Continued...
















