Toxin
Nickel Carbonyl
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Nickel Carbonyl
, Nickel tetracarbonyl, Nickel Carbonyl Toxicity, Nickel Carbonyl Poisoning
See Also
Acute Poisoning
Mechanism
Background
Nickel Carbonyl is a colorless and highly flammable inorganic compound
Volatile liquid (gas at 43 C, 109 F)
Musty or sooty odor that emits toxic
Carbon Monoxide
fumes when heated
Sources
Nickel coating in manufacturing
High-purity nickel powder production
Refining of nickel-sulfide ore
Chemical reagent (carbonylation)
Catalyst used in petroleum, plastics,
Rubber
Exposures
Pulmonary absorption at high
Temperature
Lipophilic with widespread distribution (after pulmonary absorption) to brain,
Kidney
s and liver
Toxicity
Direct pulmonary toxicity in inhalation
Increases free oxygen radicals
Inhibits RNA synthesis
Pharmacokinetics
Exposure to concentrations >100 mg/m3 are lethal after 20 minutes
Immediate toxicity with morbidity and mortality risk when >=2 ppm
Adverse Effects
Lung
toxicity (most common toxicity)
Interstitial Pneumonitis
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Skin exposure
Severe dermatitis
Cardiovascular toxicity
Myocarditis
Central Nervous System
(CNS) toxicity
Encephalopathy
Known carcinogen
Lung Cancer
Nasal cancer
Findings
Acute Poisoning
Onset of symptoms with hours to one week of exposure
Constitutional (early)
Nausea
Headache
Dizziness
Cardiopulmonary
Early with Interstitial Pneumonitis
Chest Pain
Shortness of Breath
Later
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Pulmonary Hemorrhage
Myocarditis
with
Dysrhythmia
s
Neurologic
Encephalopathy
Seizure
s
Respiratory depression
Labs
Acute Poisoning
See
Acute Poisoning
Complete Blood Count
Leukocytosis
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel
Liver
Transaminitis
(AST, ALT)
Urine Nickel Level (collected over 8 hours)
Levels >500 mcg/L are associated with severe toxicity
Diagnostics
Electrocardiogram
QT Prolongation
ST Change
T Wave
Change
Imaging
Chest XRay
Interstitial Pneumonitis
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
CT Head
Cerebral edema may accompany encephalopathy
Management
ABC Management
Focus on airway, oxygenation, ventilation
Skin Decontamination
Remove all clothing
Wash skin with soap and water
Chelation therapy
Sodium
Diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC, preferred if available)
Disulfiram
(alternative to DDC)
Day 1: Dose 750 mg orally every 8 hours
Subsequent days: 250 mg every 8 hours
Disposition
ICU admission
Persistent findings (pulmonary, neurologic, cardiovascular)
Concerning exposure (nonspecific symptoms may be present)
Observe for 8 hours
Collect 8 hour urine nickel level and use level to determine risk and disposition
Asymptomatic with only brief or limited exposure
Discharge with return precautions
Resources
Nickel Carbonyl 1 Acute Exposure Guideline Levels
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK207867/
Gates (2023) Nickel Toxicology, StatPearls
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK592400/
References
Carroll and Yakey (2026) Crit Dec Emerg Med 40(3): 42
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