Oxalic acid and oxalates are used as bleaches, metal cleaners, and rust removers and in chemical synthesis and leather tanning. A laundry powder containing sachets of oxalic acid and potassium permanganate was reported to cause an epidemic of fatal self-poisonings in Sri Lanka. Soluble and insoluble oxalate salts are found in several species of plants.
Ingestion of 5-15 g of oxalic acid has caused death. The recommended workplace limit (ACGIH TLV-TWA) for oxalic acid vapor is 1 mg/m3 as an 8-hour time-weighted average. The short-term exposure limit (STEL), a level that should not be exceeded for more than 15 minutes, is 2 mg/m3. The level considered immediately dangerous to life or health (IDLH) is 500 mg/m3.
Toxicity may occur as a result of skin or eye contact, inhalation, or ingestion.
- Acute skin or eye contact causes irritation and burning, which may lead to serious corrosive injury if the exposure and concentration are high.
- Inhalation may cause sore throat, cough, and wheezing. Large exposures may lead to chemical pneumonitis or pulmonary edema.
- Ingestion of soluble oxalates may result in weakness, tetany, convulsions, and cardiac arrest due to profound hypocalcemia. The QT interval may be prolonged, and variable conduction defects may occur. Oxalate crystals may be found on urinalysis. Insoluble oxalate crystals are not absorbed but can cause irritation and swelling in the oropharynx and esophagus. Oxalic acid ingestion can cause serious corrosive injury.
Is based on a history of exposure and evidence of local or systemic effects or oxalate crystalluria.
- Specific levels. Serum oxalate levels are not available.
- Other useful laboratory studies include electrolytes, glucose, BUN, creatinine, calcium (total and ionized), ECG monitoring, and urinalysis microscopy for oxalic acid crystals.