Mycotoxins: The Toxic Mould Crisis in UK Homes
Mycotoxins — potent secondary metabolites produced by toxigenic moulds including Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium, and the notorious black mould Stachybotrys chartarum — are among the most biologically active and pathogenic compounds on Earth, with documented capacity to suppress immunity, damage the liver and kidneys, disrupt the endocrine system, cause neurotoxicity, and act as carcinogens at extremely low concentrations. The UK's predominantly old, damp, and poorly ventilated housing stock — exacerbated by energy-efficiency retrofits that reduce air exchange — creates ideal conditions for mould colonisation, with an estimated 14% of English homes affected by visible damp according to the English Housing Survey. Critically, mycotoxins are invisible, odourless at pathological concentrations, not eliminated by cleaning visible mould growth, and not screened for by NHS diagnostic protocols despite being a documented cause of the fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, respiratory disease, and immune dysregulation that millions of UK residents attribute to unexplained 'mystery illnesses'.