Metal Fume Fever
When working with cylinders or operating cylinder valves, ensure that you wear
appropriate protective clothing - gloves, boots and safety glasses.
Welding of certain materials can give rise to fume containing freshly formed
metal
oxide fume. If inhaled in sufficient concentration it can produce a reaction similar to
a
bout of flu. This is what is commonly known as Metal Fume Fever.
Although it normally lasts no more than a day, it is possible to get an attack of fume
fever
more than once. However, there is no evidence to suggest that repeated bouts cause
cumulative damage.
The metal oxides usually associated with metal fume fever are those of zinc and copper,
although others can have the same effects. In welding and cutting it is working with
copper
alloys, galvanised and some painted components that are most likely to this problem.
Alternative names for metal fume fever include, 'Zinc Fume Fever', 'Brass Chills' or
'Brass
Founders Ague'. These derive from the regular occurrence of fume fever in workers
employed
in brass foundries, where zinc, with its low boiling point (907°C), would boil-off when
added to molten copper at 1083°C, forming zinc oxide in the air.
Symptoms
Metal Fume Fever is an acute, 'flu-like' attack brought on by exposure to freshly
formed
metal oxide fume.
Causes
Fume Fever is caused by inhalation of freshly formed metal oxide fume. Any fresh metal
oxide
can cause it but it is most frequently associated with zinc, from welding brasses,
galvanized iron and steel, other alloys containing zinc and in some instances zinc rich
primers and paints.
Control Measures
The simplest way to avoid getting metal fume fever is to use a suitable fume extractor,
correctly positioned, to take the metal oxide fume away from the welders' breathing
zone.
The most suitable kind of extractor is a high volume, low velocity unit, as this type
can be
used with all welding processes, including TIG and other gas-shielded processes, without
disrupting the gas shield.