In an Altus-area case, exposure often doesn’t look like a dramatic “accident.” It more commonly shows up through day-to-day contact such as:
- Lawn and property treatment: mowing after spraying, walking through treated areas, or handling clippings/residue.
- Nearby land and acreage: drift or residue when herbicides are applied on adjacent property.
- Work sites with repeated use: groundskeeping, landscaping, facility maintenance, or agriculture-related roles.
- Secondhand exposure: work clothes brought home, gloves/boots stored near living spaces, or tools reused without proper cleaning.
Because the exposure story matters, the most helpful cases are the ones that can explain where exposure occurred, how it occurred, and when it likely occurred relative to diagnosis.


