Lead+Acetate

Mining or smelting produces lead fume by primary or secondary smelting, this includes brass, copper, and lead foundries and scrap metal recycling operations Manufacturing: lead-acid battery, crystal glass, lead joints/ babbitt, pewter, fishing weights, leaded or stained glass, paint and ink, leaded plastics, ammunition, electronic components using fritted glass, lead pipe, sheet, solder, type metal, cable shielding, or anodes, ceramics, mix and weigh lead powders Using: Weld, cut, braze, grind, sand or blast old paint, houses and buildings, bridges, ships, steel towers, water, petroleum, or underground tanks produce lead fume or dust by heating, machining, or spraying lead products, radiator repair, firing ranges Cough, sore throat if inhaled Redness and pain if absorbed through skin or contact with the eyes Abdominal cramps, constipation, convulsions, nausea, vomiting if ingested
 * Lead Acetate** is able to affect you when it is breathed in and by passing through your skin and when swallowed**.** This chemical should be handled as a carcinogen and a teartogen, it should be handled with extreme caution. It may cause kidney and brain damage, and damage to blood cells causing anemia. There is evidence that lead acetate has a carcinogenic effect, and it may cause harm to an unborn child and there is the possible risk of impaired fertility. This chemical is very dangerous to the environment.
 * Possible Symptoms:**