| Etiology Denotes Environmental and Occupational Diseases | Most environmental and occupational diseases either manifest as common medical problems (e.g., rashes, asthma, angina, spontaneous abortion) or have nonspecific symptoms (e.g., headache, difficulty concentrating, behavioral problems, myalgias, difficulty conceiving) [Amdur MO 1991; Marshall et al. 2002; Wigle D 2000]. Establishing the etiology can distinguish a disorder as an environmental illness.Table 1. Examples of Environmental & Occupational Causes of Medical Problems [Goldman and Peters 1981; Nelson et al. 2011]
 
| Symptoms and Diseases | Agent | Mode of Exposure |  
| Immediate or Short-Term Effects |  
| dermatoses (allergic or irritant) | metals (chromium, nickel), 
fibrous glass, solvents, 
caustic alkali, soaps) | electroplating, metal cleaning, plastics, machining, leather tanning, housekeeping |  
| headache | carbon monoxide, solvents | firefighting, automobile exhaust, 
wood finishing, 
dry cleaning |  
| acute psychoses | lead, 
mercury, 
carbon disulfide | removing paint from old houses, fungicide, wood preserving, viscose rayon industry |  
| asthma or dry cough | Formaldehyde, toluene diisocyanate, animal dander | textiles, plastics, polyurethane kits, polyurethane foam, 
lacquer, animal handlers |  
| pulmonary edema, pneumonitis | nitrogen oxides, phosgene, halogen gases, cadmium | welding, farming, chemical operations, smelting |  
| cardiac arrhythmias | solvents, fluorocarbons | metal cleaning, using solvents, refrigerator maintenance |  
| angina | carbon monoxide, methylene chloride | car repair, traffic exhaust, foundry, 
wood finishing |  
| abdominal pain | lead | battery making, enameling, smelting, painting, welding, ceramics, plumbing |  
| hepatitis (may become chronic) | halogenated hydrocarbons (e.g., carbon tetrachloride) | using solvents, lacquer use, hospital workers |  
| Latent or Long-Term Effects |  
| chronic dyspnea, pulmonary fibrosis | asbestos, 
silica, 
beryllium,
coal, 
aluminum | mining, insulation, pipefitting, sandblasting, quarrying, metal alloy work, aircraft or electrical parts, 
foundry work |  
| chronic bronchitis, emphysema | cotton dust, cadmium, 
coal dust, organic solvents, cigarettes | textile industry, battery production, soldering, mining, 
solvent use |  
| lung cancer | asbestos,
arsenic, 
nickel, 
uranium, 
coke-oven emissions | insulation, pipefitting, smelting, 
coke-ovens, shipyard workers, 
nickel refining, uranium mining |  
| bladder cancer | a-naphthylamine, benzidine dyes | dye industry, leather, rubber-workers, chemists |  
| peripheral neuropathy | lead, 
arsenic, hexane, 
methyl butyl ketone, acrylamide | battery production, plumbing, smelting, painting, shoemaking, solvent use, insecticides |  
| behavioral changes | lead, 
carbon disulfide, solvents, mercury, manganese | battery makers, smelting, viscose rayon industry, degreasing, manufacture/ repair of scientific instruments, 
dental amalgam workers |  
| Extrapyrami-dal syndrome | carbon disulfide, manganese | viscose rayon industry, 
steel production, battery production, foundry work |  
| aplastic anemia, leukemia | benzene, ionizing radiation | chemists, furniture refinishing, cleaning, degreasing, radiation workers |  Unless an exposure history is pursued by the clinician, the etiologic diagnosis might be missed, treatment may be inappropriate, and exposure can continue. |