In our work with North Carolina claimants, chemical harm frequently shows up as:
- Skin injuries: burns, blistering, rashes, and lingering sensitivity
- Breathing and respiratory effects: coughing, wheezing, chest tightness, or ongoing shortness of breath after a release
- Head, nerve, and cognitive symptoms: headaches, dizziness, memory problems, numbness, or “brain fog” after exposure
- Eye and throat irritation: tearing, pain, hoarseness, or persistent irritation after inhaling fumes
- Delayed complications: symptoms that worsen days later—especially when the initial incident was treated as a minor “incident”
These injuries can be triggered by a one-time event (like a spill or strong chemical cloud) or repeated contact (like certain cleaning or maintenance tasks performed over time).


