In East Texas, many people are exposed through residential landscaping, property maintenance, and nearby application—including situations involving:
- Homeowners treating yards and driveways over multiple seasons
- Neighbors’ or contractors’ application schedules that weren’t tracked at the time
- Agricultural or maintenance work where herbicides are used as part of routine grounds care
- Secondary exposure concerns (for example, contamination carried on clothing/gear after a job)
When symptoms show up months or years later, it’s common to realize the hardest part isn’t the diagnosis—it’s reconstructing how exposure happened and what product was actually used.


