Every case is different, but the patterns we investigate often fall into a few familiar buckets:
- Construction and industrial workforce exposures: Chemical use during site work, inadequate ventilation, improper storage of cleaning agents, and failures to follow safety protocols.
- Indoor air and moisture problems: Mold growth after leaks, recurring odors in commercial spaces, or contaminated HVAC conditions that worsen symptoms over time.
- Residential water contamination concerns: Issues that may show up after residents notice changes in taste, odor, or recurring illness patterns, prompting testing requests.
- Event- and tourism-adjacent exposures: When people gather in the same venue repeatedly, exposure claims can turn on maintenance logs, vendor records, and the timing of symptoms for attendees and staff.
- Vehicle and equipment chemical exposure: Fume exposure from repairs, detailing products, or repeated contact with solvents and degreasers without proper protection.
In these situations, the hardest part is often not recognizing that something is wrong—it’s proving what the substance was, that exposure occurred the way you say it did, and that it caused the harm doctors are treating.


