©2007, Morgan & Associates, Inc. (dba Peroxygen Solutions). All rights reserved. | PAK™27 is a registered trademark of Solvay Chemicals, Inc.
If you have any comment on this website, please contact the webmaster.

The most noteworthy blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) toxins fall into one of two types:

Some cyanotoxins are more benign forms that only cause respiratory discomfort and/or dermatological rashes, sometimes called “swimmers itch.” Research to date, based only on the analysis of their chemical structures, suggests that all of the currently known toxins are oxidizable. In other words, free oxygen could be used to cleave and biologically “disarm” the toxins. At the present time, there are no efficacy studies completed to formally substantiate the theory, but studies are forthcoming. One of the most common and dangerous hepatotoxins found in freshwater environments, Microcystin-LR, is now commercially available for testing.

Toxins That Can Be Deadly
For decades now, animal kills near ponds and lakes have been attributed to Microcystin and other toxins associated with algal blooms. More recently, human deaths and illnesses in Brazil were attributed to the Microcystin toxin. Most recently, a neurotoxin, Anatoxin-a, was eventually cited as the cause of a mysterious death of a teen in Wisconsin.