Manganism (Manganese Toxicity): Symptoms, Causes, and Risks

Manganese is an essential mineral — your body genuinely needs a small amount of it — but too much of it, absorbed over time, can be a potent neurotoxin. The classic illness it causes is called manganism: a movement and mood disorder that looks a lot like Parkinson's disease, with slowness, stiffness, tremor, clumsiness, irritability, and trouble thinking clearly. Here is the most important thing to understand at the outset: manganism almost never comes from food. A normal diet, even one rich in manganese, does not cause it, because the gut and liver tightly limit how much dietary manganese the body keeps. Real manganese toxicity comes from a different route entirely — breathing in manganese-laden fumes or dust (most famously in welders and miners), drinking water with unusually high manganese, receiving manganese intravenously (as in long-term IV nutrition that bypasses the gut's safeguards), or, rarely, an inherited disorder that lets the metal build up. This hub explains what manganism is, why excess manganese is dangerous, why early cases are often missed, what actually causes it, how it is diagnosed, and how it is managed — with deep-dive pages on its movement symptoms, its mood and thinking effects, and the occupational and water exposures behind it. If you suspect a manganese exposure, this is medical territory; talk to a clinician rather than self-treating.


Symptom Deep-Dive Pages

Tremor & Parkinsonism

The hallmark of manganism — slowness, stiffness, a distinctive gait, and tremor that resemble Parkinson's disease. How manganese injures the brain's movement circuits, how the picture differs from true Parkinson's, and why it usually responds poorly to L-DOPA.

Mood & Cognitive Changes

The often-overlooked early phase — irritability, mood swings, anxiety, and subtle slips in memory, attention, and reaction time. Why these "psychiatric" symptoms can precede the movement problems, and why they are easy to attribute to something else.

Occupational & Water Exposure

Where real manganese toxicity actually comes from — welding fumes, mining and smelting dust, high-manganese well water, and intravenous nutrition. How each route bypasses the body's normal defenses, and the practical steps that reduce the risk.


Table of Contents

  1. Symptom Deep-Dive Pages
  2. What Is Manganism (Manganese Toxicity)?
  3. Why Excess Manganese Is Dangerous
  4. Why Early Manganism Is Often Missed
  5. What Actually Causes Manganese Toxicity
  6. How Manganese Toxicity Is Diagnosed
  7. How Manganese Toxicity Is Managed
  8. When to Seek Care / Red Flags
  9. Key Research Papers
  10. Connections
  11. Featured Videos

What Is Manganism (Manganese Toxicity)?

Manganese is a trace mineral that every cell needs in small amounts — it is built into enzymes that defend the body against oxidative damage, help bones form, and process sugars and proteins. (For the helpful side of manganese, see the Manganese overview and the Manganese Benefits hub.) But like several other essential metals, manganese has a narrow safe range. Below it, you can develop a deficiency; well above it, the same mineral becomes toxic. Manganese toxicity is the condition that develops when too much manganese accumulates in the body — especially in the brain — over weeks to years. The neurological illness it produces is called manganism.

Manganism was first recognized almost two centuries ago in workers who ground and milled manganese ore, and the picture has been confirmed many times since in miners, smelter and battery workers, and welders. The hallmark is a movement disorder that closely resembles Parkinson's disease: people become slow and stiff, develop a stooped posture and a peculiar high-stepping or "cock-walk" gait, and may have a tremor, a blank facial expression, and soft, monotonous speech. Alongside — and often before — the movement problems, many develop psychological changes: irritability, mood swings, anxiety, emotional outbursts, and difficulty with concentration and memory. The two deep-dive pages on Tremor & Parkinsonism and Mood & Cognitive Changes cover each cluster in detail.

Unlike potassium or calcium, manganese does not have a single, universally agreed blood number that defines "toxic." A blood manganese level above roughly 15–20 micrograms per liter is often considered elevated, but here is a crucial caveat that runs through this whole topic: blood manganese is an unreliable yardstick. Manganese spends most of its time inside cells and in the brain, not floating in the bloodstream, and the blood level can be near-normal in someone whose brain has accumulated a damaging amount — or transiently high in someone with no symptoms at all. Diagnosis therefore leans heavily on the exposure history, the clinical picture, and a brain MRI, as the diagnosis section explains.

The single most reassuring fact about manganese toxicity is also the most important: it essentially never comes from eating ordinary food. Whole grains, nuts, leafy greens, and tea are naturally rich in manganese, yet they do not cause manganism, because the digestive tract absorbs only a small fraction of dietary manganese and the liver promptly clears the excess into bile. Real toxicity comes from routes that overwhelm or bypass these defenses — chiefly inhaled fumes and dust, contaminated water, and intravenous delivery — which the causes section covers in full.

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Why Excess Manganese Is Dangerous

If manganese is essential, why is too much of it so harmful? The answer lies in where excess manganese goes and what it does once it gets there. When the body's normal limits are overwhelmed — by inhalation, contaminated water, or IV delivery — manganese crosses into the brain and preferentially accumulates in a cluster of deep structures called the basal ganglia, especially a region known as the globus pallidus. These structures are the brain's movement-control hub, which is exactly why the resulting illness looks like a Parkinson-type disorder.

Inside those brain cells, surplus manganese is thought to cause harm through several overlapping mechanisms that researchers have pieced together over decades:

A defining and sobering feature of manganism is that the damage tends to be cumulative and often only partly reversible. Catching exposure early and stopping it can halt progression and allow some recovery, but in advanced cases the movement disorder can persist, or even continue to worsen for a time, after the exposure has ended — because the structural injury to the basal ganglia has already been done. This is unlike a passing electrolyte disturbance that corrects when the number normalizes; manganism is closer to a slow poisoning of a specific brain region. That is why prevention and early detection matter so much more than treatment after the fact. The detailed neurological consequences are explored on the Tremor & Parkinsonism page.

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Why Early Manganism Is Often Missed

Manganese toxicity is rarely dramatic at the start. It does not announce itself the way a poisoning or an acute illness might. Instead it tends to creep in slowly and disguise itself as something ordinary, which is precisely why early cases are so often overlooked — by the affected person, their family, and sometimes their doctors too.

Several things conspire to keep early manganism hidden:

The practical upshot is that the exposure history is often the key that unlocks the diagnosis. Manganism should be considered in anyone with unexplained parkinsonian or neuropsychiatric symptoms who has a relevant exposure — years of welding, mining, smelting, or battery work; long-term intravenous nutrition; or a high-manganese water supply. This is also why surveillance matters for at-risk workers: like other slow occupational hazards, manganese is better caught by deliberately looking for it than by waiting for someone to complain. The Occupational & Water Exposure page describes who is at risk and how exposure is monitored.

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What Actually Causes Manganese Toxicity

Understanding the real causes of manganism means understanding how the body normally protects itself — and how each cause defeats those protections. In a healthy person eating a normal diet, two safeguards keep manganese in check: the intestine absorbs only a small percentage of the manganese in food, and the liver rapidly removes any excess by excreting it into bile (which leaves the body in stool). Toxicity happens when these defenses are bypassed (manganese enters by a route the gut and liver don't guard), overwhelmed (the dose is enormous), or broken (the liver or the genes that clear manganese aren't working). Here are the routes that matter.

A practical theme ties these together: manganese toxicity is overwhelmingly a disease of route and clearance, not of healthy eating. The dangerous routes are the ones that skip the gut and liver (inhalation, IV) or that arise when clearance fails (liver disease, genetic defects) or when the dose in water is high and chronic.

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How Manganese Toxicity Is Diagnosed

There is no single test that confirms manganism by itself. Instead, the diagnosis is assembled from three things that have to be read together: the exposure history, the clinical picture, and brain imaging, with laboratory tests playing a supporting — and notably limited — role.

For the routine blood panels that include liver and metabolic markers often checked along the way, see the Comprehensive Metabolic Panel page.

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How Manganese Toxicity Is Managed

The honest headline on treatment is that there is no reliable cure for established manganism, and the available therapies are only partly effective. This is exactly why the emphasis falls so heavily on removing the exposure and on prevention. Management has three broad strands.

The realistic outlook is mixed and depends heavily on timing. Caught early, with exposure stopped, some people stabilize and partially recover. Caught late, the movement disorder can persist or progress despite every intervention. That gap between "early and reversible" and "late and permanent" is the strongest argument for taking exposure seriously and acting before symptoms become entrenched — treatment after the fact simply cannot do what prevention can.

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When to Seek Care / Red Flags

Because manganese toxicity builds slowly and can become irreversible, the most valuable "red flag" is a relevant exposure combined with new neurological or mood symptoms — that combination warrants medical attention even if any single symptom seems minor. See a doctor (and mention the exposure explicitly) if you have a history of welding, mining, smelting, steel or battery work, long-term IV nutrition, liver disease, or high-manganese well water, and you develop any of the following:

Two situations deserve special urgency. First, anyone on long-term intravenous nutrition who develops movement or behavioral changes should be evaluated promptly, since the IV route can drive levels up quickly. Second, in a household using untreated well water in a manganese-rich area, children showing learning, attention, or behavioral difficulties are a reason to have the water tested. For the broader movement-disorder context, see Parkinson's Disease and Essential Tremor. As with any potential poisoning or toxic exposure, do not try to self-treat with supplements or chelating products bought online — manganism is genuine medical territory and benefits from specialist assessment.

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Key Research Papers

  1. O'Neal SL, Zheng W (2015). Manganese Toxicity Upon Overexposure: a Decade in Review. Current Environmental Health Reports;2(3):315-328. — DOI: 10.1007/s40572-015-0056-x
  2. Guilarte TR (2010). Manganese and Parkinson's Disease: A Critical Review and New Findings. Environmental Health Perspectives;118(8):1071-1080. — DOI: 10.1289/ehp.0901748
  3. Aschner M, Guilarte TR, Schneider JS, Zheng W (2007). Manganese: Recent advances in understanding its transport and neurotoxicity. Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology;221(2):131-147. — DOI: 10.1016/j.taap.2007.03.001
  4. Racette BA, McGee-Minnich L, Moerlein SM, et al. (2001). Welding-related parkinsonism: Clinical features, treatment, and pathophysiology. Neurology;56(1):8-13. — DOI: 10.1212/wnl.56.1.8
  5. Bowler RM, Koller W, Schulz PE (2006). Manganese exposure: Neuropsychological and neurological symptoms and effects in welders. NeuroToxicology;27(3):327-332. — DOI: 10.1016/j.neuro.2005.10.007
  6. Lucchini RG, Guazzetti S, Zoni S, et al. (2012). Tremor, olfactory and motor changes in Italian adolescents exposed to historical ferro-manganese emission. NeuroToxicology;33(4):687-696. — DOI: 10.1016/j.neuro.2012.01.005
  7. Bouchard MF, Sauvé S, Barbeau B, et al. (2011). Intellectual Impairment in School-Age Children Exposed to Manganese from Drinking Water. Environmental Health Perspectives;119(1):138-143. — DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002321
  8. Wasserman GA, Liu X, Parvez F, et al. (2011). Arsenic and Manganese Exposure and Children's Intellectual Function in Bangladesh. Epidemiology;22(1):117-118. — DOI: 10.1097/01.ede.0000391812.53279.3c
  9. Bouchard M, Laforest F, Vandelac L, et al. (2007). Hair Manganese and Hyperactive Behaviors: Pilot Study of School-Age Children Exposed Through Tap Water. Environmental Health Perspectives / Epidemiology. — PubMed
  10. Tuschl K, Mills PB, Clayton PT, et al. (2016). Hypermanganesemia with Dystonia, Polycythemia and Cirrhosis (HMDPC) due to mutation in the SLC30A10 gene. Brain and Development;38(9):862-865. — DOI: 10.1016/j.braindev.2016.04.005

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