In Peru, chemical exposure cases often begin with something that feels “contained” in the moment—an overnight maintenance event, a cleaning mistake, an HVAC malfunction, or a short-term release of fumes. Then symptoms show up later: coughing and throat irritation, headaches, dizziness, skin burning, eye damage, or worsening respiratory problems.
The key challenge is that insurers may treat the event as minor or suggest alternative causes. The sooner you document what happened and how you felt afterward, the easier it is to connect the incident to your medical records.


